
Author . 



Title 



Imprint. 



^be IHnivereiti? of Chicago 

FOUNDEP BY JoViN D. ROCKEFELLER 



BULLETIN OF INFORMATION 



Vol. XXII MAY 1922 No: 4 



REGISTER OF DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY 

OF THE UNIVERSITY OF 

CHICAGO 

JUNE 1893— DECEMBER 1921 




THE UNIVERSITY OF ckl(:AQO PRESS j^ii; 
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS'* ' ^ U- ' 



Published by the University of Chicago four times a year: January, March, April, and May. 
Entered as second-class matter March 14, 1914, at the Post-office at Chicago, III., under the Act of 
August 24, 1912. Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103, Act 
of October 3, 1917, authorized on June 6, 1918. 



1 



^be lanlvereitiP of CbicaQO 

FOUNDED BY JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER 



BULLETIN OF INFORMATION 

Vol. XXII MAY 1922 No. 4 

REGISTER OF DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY 

OF THE UNIVERSITY OF 

CHICAGO 

JUNE 1893— DECEMBER 1921 




THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 



L' c 



r) 







, o\] 



TABLE OF CONTENTS 

Social Science Group 

Philosophy 5 

Psychology 8 

Education 10 

Political Economy 13 

Political Science 15 

History 16 

Sociology and Anthropology 19 

History of Art 22 

Household Administration 22 

Home Economics (Food Chemistry) 22 

Comparative Rehgion 22 

Divinity School Group 

Oriental Languages and Literatures 23 

New Testament Literature and Interpretation 25 

Systematic Theology 27 

Church History 28 

Rehgious Education '. .29 

Sociology 30 

Classical Group 

Greek Language and Literature 31 

Latin Language and Literatiu-e 33 

Comparative Philology 35 

Modern Language Group 

Romance Languages and Literatures 37 

Germanic Languages and Literatures 38 

EngUsh Language and Literature 41 

Mathematics and Physical Science Group 

Mathematics 45 

Mathematical Astronomy 51 

Practical Astronomy and Astrophysics 51 

Physics 52 

Chemistry 56 

Earth Science Group 

Geology and Paleontology 67 

Geography 70 

Biological Group 

Zoology 71 

Anatomy 74 

Physiology 75 

Physiological Chemistry and Pharmacology 78 

Botany 78 

Pathology 85 

Hygiene and Bacteriology 86 

Numerical Summary 88 

Index of Names 89 

3 



DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF 

CHICAGO 

SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP 
PHILOSOPHY! 

1895 Edward Scribner Ames, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Agnosticism in Its Historical Development. 

1896 Simon Fra'ser MacLennan, Professor of Philosophy and Psychology, 

Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio. 
The Theory of the Impersonal Judgment. 

1898 Addison Webster Moore, Professor of Philosophy, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Implications of the Teleological Character of Knowledge in Locke's 
Essay on the Human Understanding. 
Ernest Carroll Moore, Director, University of Cahfornia, Southern 
Branch, Los Angeles, Cal. 
The Relation of Education to Philosophy in Greece and the Early 
Church. 
Arthur Kenyon Rogers, Formerly Professor of Philosophy, Yale Uni- 
versity, New Haven, Conn. 
Psycho-Physical Parallelism. 
Amy Eliza Tanner, Head of Department of Experimental Pedagogy, 
Children's Institute, Worcester, Mass. 
Imagery, with Special Reference to Association of Ideas. 

1899 Daniel Peter MacMillan, Director of Department of Scientific Peda- 

gogy and Child-Study and Educational Research, Chicago Public 
Schools, 808 Tribune Building, Chicago, 111. 
The Negative Judgment. 

1900 Henry Heath Bawden, Ysidro, Cal. 

Theory of the Criterion. 
William Franklin Moncrief, Hume Fogg High School, Nashville, Tenn. 

Examination of Mill's Inductive Canons. 
Henry Waldgrave Stuart, Professor of Philosophy, Leland Stanford 
Junior University, Stanford University P.O., Cal. 
Valuation as a Logical Process. 
Helen Bradford Thompson (Mrs. Paul Woolley), Research Fellow, 
Helen S. Troenstine Foundation, Cincinnati, Ohio, Director of the 
Nursery School of the Merrill Palmer Foundation, Detroit, Mich. 
Psychological Norms in Men and Women. 

1901 Myron Lucius Ashley, Professor of Psychology, Chicago Teachers 

College, Chicago, 111. 
The Nature of Hypothesis. 
Willard Clark Gore, Department of Education, Chicago Normal 
College, Chicago, 111. 
The Imagination in Spinoza and Hume. 
1903 Kate Gordon, Associate Professor of Psychology and Education, Carnegie 
Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Psychology of Meaning. 

1 The title of the dissertation submitted for the doctorate is printed after each name. 

5 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1904 Elizabeth Kemper Adams, Conway, Mass. 

The Aesthetic Experience: Its Meaning in a Functional Psychology. 
Werrett Wallace Charters, Professor of Education and Director of 
Research Bureau of Retail Training, Carnegie Institute of Tech- 
nology, Pittsburgh. 
Methods in History Teaching. 
Irving King, Assistant Professor, State University of Iowa, Iowa City, 
Iowa. 
The Differentiation of the Religious Consciousness. 
Irving Elgar Miller, Professor and Head of the Department of Educa- 
tion^ State Normal School, Belhngham, Wash. 
The Significance of the Mathematical Element in the Philosophy of 
Plato. 

1906 Edgar Francis Riley, Director of the Training School and Professor of 

Education in the State Normal School, Platteville, Wis. 
Descartes' Theory of the Judgment. 
William Kelley Wright, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Dartmouth 
College, Hanover, N.H. 
The Ethical Significance of Pleasure, Feeling, and Happiness in 
Modern Non-Hedonistic Systems. 

1907 Matilde Castro, Professor of Education and Director of the Phebe 

Anna Thorne Model School, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pa. 
The Respective Standpoints of Logic and Psychology. 

1908 Anna Louise Strong, Editorial Staff, Seattle Union Record, Seattle, Wash. 

A Consideration of Prayer from the Standpoint of Social Psychology. 

, 1909XDagny Gunhilda Sunne, Associate Professor of Psychology, Sophie 
Newcomb Memorial College, New Orleans, La. 
The Development of the Subjective Standpoint in Post- Aristotelian 
Philosophy. 
Ernest Lynn Talbert, Assistant Professor of Psychology and Director 
of Admissions, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
The Dualism of Fact and Idea in Its Social Implications. 

1910 Frederick Goodrich Henke, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Philosophy and Education, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. 
The Psychology of Ritualism. 
Ella Harrison Stokes, Professor of Philosophy and Education, Penn 
College, Oskaloosa, Iowa. 
The Conception of a Kingdom of Ends in Augustine, Aquinas, and 
Leibnitz. 

1911 Elijah Jordan, Professor of Philosophy, Butler College, Indianapolis, Ind. 

The Constitutive and Regulative Principles in Kant. 

1912 Homer Blosser Reed, Formerly Assistant Professor of Philosophy and 

Psychology, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho. 
The Morals of Competition and Monopoly. 
Benjamin Whitman Van Riper, Professor of Philosophy, Rockford 
College, Rockford, 111. 
An Examination of Certain Views of the Time Problem. 
Charles Edgar Witter, Principal of the Bryan Hill School, St. Louis, Mo. 
Pragmatic Elements in Kant's Philosophy. 

1913 John Forsyth Crawford, Professor of Philosophy, Beloit College, 

Beloit, Wis. 
The Relation of Inference to Fact in Mill's Logic. 
Charles Adam Mohr, Professor of Philosophy, Milton College, Milton, 
Wis. 
The New Realism and the Real. 
Julia Jessie Taft, Director, Department of Child Study, Children's 
Bureau, Philadelphia, Pa. 
The Woman Movement from the Standpoint of Personality. 



SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP 



1913 Melicent Eda Waterhotjse, Assistant Clinical Psychologist, Wisconsin 

State Department of Public Instruction, Madison, Wis. 
Universality and Necessity versus Novelty. 

1914 George Tilden Colman, Vice-Consul, U.S. Consulate, Sao Paulo, 

Brazil. 
Important Factors in the Transition from Individualistic Ethical 
Ideals of the Seventeenth Century to Social Ideals of the Nine- 
teenth Century. 

Ci/Arence Herbert Hamilton, Professor of Philosophy, University of 
Nanking, Nanking, China. 
A Psychological Interpretation of Mysticism. 
Ethel May Kitch, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Oberlin College, 
Oberlin, Ohio. 
Origin and Development of Subjectivity in Hindu Thought. 

1916 Josef Roy Geiger, Professor of Philosophy, William and Mary College, 

Williamsburg, Va. 
Religious Aspects of Pragmatism. 
Colin Allen McPheeters, Professor of Philosophy, Westminster 
College, Fulton, Mo. 
Moral Standards in Early Kentucky and Missouri. 
Carl Conrad Wermli Nicol, Associate Professor of Psychology and 
Philosophy and Dean of Men, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio. 
Influence of Function and Occupation on Ethical Codes. 

1917 Clarence Edwin Ayres, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Amherst 

College, Amherst, Mass. 
The Nature of the Relationship between Ethics and Economics. 
Esther Crane, Professor and Head of the Department of Philosophy and 
Psychology, Wilson College, Chambersburg, Pa. 
The Place of the Hypothesis in Logic. 
William A. Crowley, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of 
Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
The Logic of the Greek Physicians. 
Jacob Robert Kantor, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Indiana Uni- 
versity, Bloomington, Ind. 
The Functional Nature of the Philosophical Categories. 

1918 Holly Estil Cunningham, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Philosophy, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla. 
Three Types of Logical Theory. 
Margaret Daniels (Mrs. Solon DeLeon), Instructor, Workers' Uni- 
versity of the International Ladies' Garment Workers, New 
York City. 
The Aesthetic Aspects of Religious Worship. 
Ephraim Edward Ericksen, Professor of Philosophy, University of 
Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah. 
Psychological and Ethical Aspects of the Mormon Group Life. 
Sterling Price Williams, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Philosophy and Education, Ilhnois Wesleyan University, Bloom- 
ington, 111. 
The Conception of Reason in Sidgwick's Ethics. 
Kai-Lok Yen, Professor of Physics, LMversity of Peking, Peking, China. 
The Traditional and the Scientific Trends in the Logic of Leibnitz. 

1919 RuFus Norman Boardman, New Richmond, Wis. 

The Significance of Meaning in Pragmatism and Neo-Realism. 

1920 Sidney Kok Wei, Professor of Philosophy, Canton Christian College, 

Canton, China. 
International Relationship in China and Its Ethical, Social, and 
Political Interpretation. 

1921 Edith Ayres Copeland (Mrs. Morris Copeland), Ithaca, N.Y. 

Some Ethical Factors in Logical Theory. 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1921 Mont Robertson Gabbert, Assistant Professor and Head of the Depart- 
ment of Philosophy, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
Theories of Consciousness. 

PSYCHOLOGY 

1903 John Broadus Watson, Research Executive, J. Walter Thompson 

Advertising Co., New York City. 
The Psychic Development of the White Rat Correlated with the 
Growth of the Nervous System. 

1904 Jessie Blount Allen (Mrs. Werrett Wallace Charters), Pittsburgh, Pa. 

The Psychology of the Guinea-Pig. 

1905 Harvey Carr, Associate Professor of Experimental Psychology, Uni- 

versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Some Visual Illusions Due to Eye Closure. 

1907 June Etta Downey, Professor of Philosophy and Psychology, University 

of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyo. 

Control Processes in Handwriting: An Experimental Study of Verbal 
Imagery. 
Grace Maxwell Fernald, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Uni- 
versity of California, Southern Branch, Los Angeles, Cal. 

The Phenomena of Peripheral Vision as Affected by the Brightness of 
Background and by Dark Adaptation. 
Joseph Peterson, Professor of Psychology, Peabody College for Teachers, 
Nashville, Tenn. 

Ohm's Law in Relation to Some Secondary Phenomena of Hearing. 

1908 Walter Van Dyke Bingham, Professor of Psychology and Director of 

Co-operative Research, Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
Studies in Melody and Movement. 
Florence Ella Richardson (Mrs. Edward S. Robinson), Chicago, 111. 

Sensory Control Processes in the Rat. 
Clarence Stone Yoakum, Professor of Psychology and Director of 
Bureau of Personnel Research, Carnegie Institute of Technology, 
Pittsburgh, Pa. 
An Experimental Study of Fatigue. 

1909 Harvey Andrew Peterson, Professor of Psychology, Illinois State 

Normal University, Normal, 111. 
The Influence of Complexity and Dissimilarity in Memory. 
Arthur Howard Sutherland, Head of the Division of Psychology, 

Public Schools, Los Angeles, Cal . 
Word Association Reactions: A Contribution to the Anal3'sis of 

Ideational Complexes. 

1910 Henry Foster Adams, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of 

Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
Autokinetic Sensations. 
Mabel Ruth Fernald, Director of Vocational Bureau, in charge of 
Psychological Laboratory, Board of Education, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
Diagnosis of Mental Imagery. 
Mary Holmes Stevens Hayes, The Scott Co., New York City. 
Cutaneous After-Sensations. 

Clara Jea.n Weidensall, Research Assistant in Clinical Medicine, 
Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
A Study in Visual Rhythm. 



SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP 



1911 Jasper Converse Barnes, Dean and Professor of Psychology and 

Education, Maryville College, Maryville, Tenn. 
Experimental Analysis of Voluntary Movement. 
Ethel May Chamberlain (Mrs. G. Porter), Torrington, Conn. 

The Purkinje Phenomenon. 
Joseph Wanton Hayes, Crowell Publishing Co., New York City. 

Investigation of the Horizontal-Vertical Illusion of Brightness in 
Foveal Vision. 

1912 Walter Samuel Hunter, Professor of Psychology, University of Kansas, 

Lawrence, Kan. 
The Delayed Reaction. 
Fleming Allen Clay Perrin, Adjunct Professor of Psychology, Uni- 
versity of Texas, Austin, Tex. 
An Experimental and Introspective Study of the Human Learning 
Process in the Maze. 
Carl Leo Stahr Rahn, Instructor in Psychology, University of Illinois, 
Urbana, 111. 
A Critical and Constructive Study of the Psychology of Thinking. 
Stella Burnham Vincent, Instructor in Psychology, Chicago Teachers 
College, Chicago, 111. 
The Function of Vibrissae in the Behavior of the White Rat. 

1913 Edwina Abbott (Mrs. Austin M. Cowan), Consulting Psychologist, 

Wichita, Kan. 
The Difference Limen in Temperature Sensations. 

1914 Ellsworth Paris, Professor of Sociology, University of Chicago, Chi- 

cago, 111. 
The Psychology of Punishment. 
Roberts Bishop Owen, Boston, Mass. 
The Psychology of Recognition. 

1915 Harry Dexter Kitson, Professor of Psychology, University of Indiana, 

Bloomington, Ind. 
The Scientific Study of the College Student. 

1916 Louis Augustus Pechstein, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Psychology and Education, University of Rochester, Rochester, 
N.Y. 

Methods in Motor Learning. 
Sarah Margaret Ritter, Professor of Philosophy, Psychology and 
Education, Woman's College of Alabama, Montgomery, Ala. 

The Vertical-Horizontal Illusion — An Experimental Study of Dis- 
parities in the Normal Visual Field. 
Louie Winfield Webb, Associate Professor of Psychology and Educa- 
tion, Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. 

Transfer of Training and Retroaction, a Comparative Study. 

1917 Ada Hart Arlitt, Associate Professor of Education, Bryn Mawr Col- 

lege, Bryn Mawr, Pa. 
Effect of Alcohol on the Intelligent Behavior of the White Rat. 
Shoan Masuzo Fukuya, Professor of Psychology, Aoyama Normal 
School, Tokyo, Japan. 
Effects of Attention upon the Efficiency of Intellectual Functions. 
Edward Safford Jones, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Oberlin 
College, Oberlin, Ohio. 
The Influence of Age and Experience on Correlations Connected with 
Mental Tests. 
Conrad Lund Kjerstad, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Psychology and Education, State Normal School, Valley City, 
N.D. 
The Form of the Learning Curve. 



10 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1917 John Christian Peterson, Professor of Psychology, Kansas State 
Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kan. 
An Experimental Study of the Higher Mental Processes in Learning. 
Curt Rosenow, Assistant Professor of Psychology, University of Kansas, 
Lawrence, Kan. 
Analysis of Mental Functions. 
Beardsley Ruml, Assistant to the President, Carnegie Corporation, 
New York City. 
The Reliability of Mental Tests in the Division of an Academic 
Group. 
Louis Leon Thtjrstone, Associate Professor of Psychology, Carnegie 
Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Learning Curve Equation. 
Rutledge Thornton Wiltbank, Professor and Head of the Department 
of Psychology, Knox College, Galesburg, 111. 
Transfer of Learning in Animals. 
Harry Hanes Wylie, Professor of Education and Director of Extension, 
Geneva College, Beaver Falls, Pa. 
An Experimental Study of Transfer of Response in White Rats. 

1920 Forrest Alva Kingsbury, Assistant Professor of Psychology, University 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
A Group Intelligence Scale for Primary Grades. 
Chih Wei Luh, Professor of Psychology, College of Nanking, China. 

The Conditions of Retention. 
Edward Stevens Robinson, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Uni- 
versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Some Factors Determining the Degree of Retroactive Inhibition. 
Margaret Wooster, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Beloit College, 
Beloit, Wis. 
Certain Factors in the Formation of a New Spatial Co-ordination. 
Joseph Ussery Yarbrough, Professor of Psychology, Southern Methodist 
University, Dallas, Tex. 
Influence of Time Interval upon the Rate of Learning in the White 
Rat. 

1921 Helen Lois Koch, Instructor in Educational Psychology, University 

of Texas, Austin, Tex. 
The Influence of Mechanical Guidance upon Maze Learning. 
Katherine Eva Ludgate, Instructor in Psychology, University of 

Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Effect of Manual Guidance upon Maze Learning. 

EDUCATION 

1900 tWiLLiAM Arthur Clark, 

Suggestipn in Education. 
IElla Flagg Young. 

Isolation in the School. 

1901 Samuel Bower Sinclair, Inspector of Auxiliary Classes, Ontario Depart- 

ment of Education, Toronto, Canada. 
Possibility of a Science of Education. 

1902 Katherine Elizabeth Dopp, Author, 5730 Drexel Ave., Chicago, 111. 

The Place of Industries in Elementary Education. 
1904 John T. McManis, Principal, High School, Templeton, Cal. 

The Development of the Elementary Course of Study in the First 
Half of the Nineteenth Century. 

t Deceased. 



SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP 11 

1906 Albert Allison Farley, Professor of Education, State Normal School, 
Oshkosh, Wis. 
The Rise of the Free Public School Idea in America. 
Daniel Ambrose Tear, Principal, Holmes School, Chicago, 111. 

The Logical Basis of Educational Theory from the Standpoint of 
Instrumental Logic. 

1909 Lilla Estelle Appleton, Head, Department of Education and Psy- 
chology, Oxford College for Women, Oxford, Ohio. 
A Comparative Study of the Play Activities of Adult Savages 
and Civilized Children, with the Pedagogical Deductions There- 
from. 
Joseph Kinmot Hart, Associate Editor of The Survey, New York City. 
A Study of Moral Education from the Standpoint of Mental Develop- 
ment. 

1911 John Addison Clement, Associate Professor of Education, Northwestern 
University, Evanston, 111. 
Standardization of the Schools of Kansas. 

1914 Clara Schmitt, Child-Study Department, Board of Education, Chicago, 

111. 
Standardization of Tests for Defective Children. 

1915 Fred Carleton Ayer, Professor of Education, University of Washington, 

Seattle, Wash. 
The Psychology of Drawing, with Special Reference to Laboratory 
Teaching. 
Edward Alanson Miller, Professor of Education, Oberlin College, 
Oberlin, Ohio. 
History of Educational I-egislation of Ohio from 1803 to 1850. 
Walter Scott Monroe, Professor of Education and Director of Educa- 
tional Research, LTniversity of Illinois, LIrbana, 111. 
A History of Arithmetics in the United States, with Emphasis upon 
the Influence of Warren Colburn in Directing the Development 
of Arithmetic as a School Subject. 
RoLLA Milton Tryon, Associate Professor of the Teaching of History, 
College of Education, University ot Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Household Manufactures in the United States, 1640-1860. 

1916 George Sylvester Counts, Associate Professor of Secondary Education, 

Yale University, New Haven, Conn. 
Arithmetic Tests and Studies in the Psychology of Arithmetic. 
Clarence Truman Gray, Professor of Education, University of Texas, 
Austin, Tex. 
Experimental Studies of Various Types of Readers. 
William Scott Gray, Professor of Education and Dean of the College 
of Education, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Studies of Elementary-School Reading through Standardized Tests. 
Elsie Garland Hobson, Head Mistress of the Phebe Anna Thorne 
Model School, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pa. 
Educational Legislation and Administration in the State of New 
York from 1775 to 1850. 
Leonard Vincent Koos, Professor of Secondary Education, University 
of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Administration of Secondary-School Units. 
Benjamin Floyd Pittenger, Associate Professor of Education, University 
of Texas, Austin, Tex. 
The Efficiency of College Students as Related to Their Age at En- 
trance and to the Size of High School from Which They Came. 



12 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1916 William Anton Smith, Assistant Professor of Education, University of 

California, Southern Branch, Los Angeles, Cal. 
An Experimental Study in the Psychology of Reading. 
James Reed Young, Professor of Education, University of Nevada, 

Reno, Nev. 
Relation of the Church and Clergy to Education in the American 

Colonies. 

1917 RoLLO La Verne Lyman, Associate Professor of the Teaching of English, 

College of Education, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Professor of English Grammar in American Schools to 1850. 

1918 John Elbert Stout, Professor of Administration in Religious Education, 

Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. 
Development of the High-School Curriculum in the North Central 
States, 1860-1900. 

1919 William Leeds Richardson, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Education, Butler College, Indianapolis, Ind. 
The Administration of Schools in the Cities of the Dominion of 
Canada. 
Lewis Wilbur Smith, Principal, Township High School and Junior 
College, Joliet, 111. 
Illinois High Schools. Their Organization, Maintenance, Adminis- 
tration, and Instruction, with Particular Reference to the Town- 
ship High School. 
William Henington Weathersbt, Professor of Education, Mississippi 
College, Clinton, Miss. 
A History of Educational Legislation in Mississippi from 1798-1860. 

1920 Gut Thomas Buswell, Assistant Professor of Education, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
An Experimental Study of the Eye-Voice Span in Reading. 
Charles Myron Reinoehl, Professor of School Administration, Uni- 
versity of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. 
Analytic Survey of State Com-ses of Study for Rural Elementary 
Schools. 
Martin James Stormzand, Associate Professor of Education, University 
of Southern California, Los Angeles, Cal. 
The Content of School Courses in English Grammar. 
Paul Washington Terry, Assistant Professor of Education, University * 
of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 
An Experimental Study of the Reading of Isolated Numerals and of 
Numerals in Arithmetical Problems. 

1 921 Thomas Dudley Brooks, Professor of School Administration and Chair- 

man, School of Education, Baylor University, Waco, Tex. 
The Intermediate Unit in State School Systems, with Especial 
Reference to New York. 

Julian Ashby Burruss, President, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 
Blacksburg, Va. 
A Study of the Business Administration of Colleges, Based on an 
Examination of the Practices of Land-Grant Colleges in the Making 
and Using of Budgets. 
Frederick Butler Harrington, Assistant Professor of Education, 
University of Montana, Missoula, Mont. 
History of Educational Legislation in New Jersey from 1776 to 1867. 

Charles Sutphin Pendleton, Professor of the Teaching of English, Pea- 
body College, Nashville, Tenn. 
A Study of the Social Objectives of English Instruction in High 
School and Elementary School. 



SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP 13 

1921 Ward Glen Reeder, Head of the Department oi Education, and Director of 
Educational Measurements, State Teachers College, Moorhead, Minn. 
The Organization of State Departments of Education. 
Willis Lemon Uhl, Associate Professor of Education, LTniversity of 
Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 
Scientific Determination of the Content of the Elementary-School 
Course in Reading. 

POLITICAL ECONOMY 

1894 John Cummings, Statistician, Federal Board for Vocational Education, 
Washington, D.C. 
The Poor Law System of the United States. 

1897 Henry Rand Hatfield, Professor of Accounting and Dean of the Facul- 

ties, University of California, Berkeley, Cal. 
Municipal Bonding in the United States. 
Simon James McLean, Member of Board of Railway Commissioners 
for Canada, Ottawa, Canada. 
The Railway Policy of Canada. 
George Gerard Tunell, Secretary of the Board of Pensions of the 
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway System, Chicago, 111. 
Transportation on the Great Lakes of North America. 

1898 Herbert Joseph Davenport, Professor of Political Economy, Cornell 

University, Ithaca, N.Y. 
The French War Indemnity. 
Henry Parker Willis, Professor of Economics, Columbia University, 

New York City. 
History of the Latin Monetary Union. 

1899 Harry Alvin Millis, Professor of Political Economy, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 

History of the Finances of the City of Chicago. 
Wesley Clair Mitchell, Professor of Economics, Columbia Univer- 
sity, New York City. 

History of the United States, Notes. 

1900 Katharine Bement Davis, General Secretary, Bureau of Social Hygiene, 

New York City. 

Causes Affecting the Standard of Living and Wages. 
Worthy Putnam Sterns, Special Examiner in the Bureau of Corpora- 
tions, Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C. 

Studies in the Foreign Trade of the United States. 

1901 fRoBERT Samuel Padan. 

Studies in Interest. 

1903 Charles Criswell Arbuthnot, Professor of Economics, Western 

Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. 
The Development of the Corporation and the Entrepreneur Function. 
Stephen Butler Leacock, Head of the Department of Economics and 

Pohtical Science, McGill University, Montreal, Canada. 
The Doctrine of Laissez Faire. 

1904 Murray Shipley Wildman, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Economics, Stanford University, Stanford University, Cal. 
The Economic and Social Conditions Which Explain Inflation Move- 
ments in the L'nited States. 

1905 Edith Abbott, Associate Professor of Social Service Administration in 

the Graduate School of Social Service Administration, University 
of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
A Statistical Study of the Wages of Unskilled Labor in the United 
States, 1830-1900. 

t Deceased. 



14 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1905 Earl Dean Howard, Professor of Economics, Northwestern University, 

Evanston, 111. 
The Recent Industrial Progi'ess of Germany. 

fRoBERT Franklin Hoxie. 

An Analysis of the Concepts of Demand and Supply in Their Relation 
to Market Price. 

1906 Albert Newton Merritt, Secretary-Treasurer, Wholesale Grocers 

Exchange, Chicago, 111. 
Federal Regulation of Railway Rates. 

1907 Donald Elliott Bridgman, Attorney, 801 First National-Soo Line Bldg., 

Minneapolis, Minn. 
Economic Causes of Large Fortunes. 

1908 Eugene Bryan Patton, Statistitian, Bureau of Labor, Albany, N.Y. 

The Resumption of Specie Payment in 1879. 
Oscar Douglas Skelton, Professor of Political Science, Queen's Uni- 
versity, Kingston, Canada. 
An Examination of Marxian Theory. 
William Walker Swanson, Professor of Economics, University of 
Saskatchewan. 
The EvStablishment of the National Banking System. 
Anna Pritchett Youngman, Research Assistant, Division of Analysis 
and Research, Federal Reserve Board; Lecturer in Banking, 
School of Business, Columbia University, New York City. 
The Economic Causes of Large Fortunes. 

1909 George Asbury Stephens, Economist, Federal Trade Commission, and 

Professor of Insurance, American University, Washington, D.C. 
Influence of Trade Education upon Wages. 

1910 Edgar Hutchinson Johnson, Professor of History and Economics, 

Emory College, Oxford, Ga. 
The Economics of Henry George's Progress and Poverty. 

1912 Isaac Lippincott, Professor of Economic Resources, Washington Uni- 

versity, St. Louis, Mo. 
The Industrial History of the Ohio Valley to 1860. 

1913 James Dysart Magee, Associate Professor of Economics, New York 

University, New York City. 

Money and Prices: A Statistical Study of Price Movements. 

1914 William John Alexander Donald, Managing Director, National 

Personnel Association, New York City. 
The History of the Canadian Iron and Steel Industry. 
Harold Glenn Moulton, Head of the Institute of Economics, 

Washington, D.C. 
Waterways versus Railways. 

1915 Duncan A. MacGibbon, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Economics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada. 
Railway Rates and the Canadian Railway Commission. 
Edwin Griswold Nourse, Professor of Agricultural Economics, Iowa 
State Agricultural College, Ames, Iowa. 
A Study in Market Mechanism as a Factor in Price Determination. 

1916 Frederick Benjamin Garver, Professor of Economics, University of 

Minnesota,_ Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Subvention in the State Finances of Pennsylvania. 
1918 Sumner Huber Slichter, Assistant Professor of Economics, Cornell 
University, Ithaca, N.Y. 
The Turnover of Labor. 
1920 Clarence Elmore Bonnett, Professor of Economics, Tulane University, 
New Orleans, La. 
Employers' Associations. 

t Deceased. 



SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP 15 

1920 Harold Adams Innis, Lecturer in Political Economy, University of 

Toronto, Toronto, Canada. 
History of the Canadian Pacific Railway. 
Hazel Kyrk, Ashley, Delaware Co., Ohio. 

The Consumer's Guidance of Economic Activity. 
Edward Becker Mittelman, Instructor in Economics and Sociology, 
Oregon Agricultural College, Corvallis, Ore. 
History of Trade Unionism, 1833-1839. 

1921 Morris Albert Copeland, Instructor in Political Economy, Cornell 

University, Ithaca, N.Y. 
Some Phases of Institutional Value Theory. 
Carter Lyman Goodrich, Economist, "/o Memorial Fellowship Commit- 
tee, Amherst College, Amherst, Mass. 
The Frontier of Control, a Study in British Workshop Pohtics. 
Leverett Samuel Lyon, Assistant Professor of Commercial Organiza- 
tion in the School of Commerce and Administration, University 
of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
A Functional Approach to Social-Economic Data. 
William Marshall Walter Splawn, Professor of Economics, Uni- 
versity of Texas, Austin, Tex. 
The Railroad Commission of Texas. 



POLITICAL SCIENCE 

1898 Lawrence Boyd Evans, Boston, Mass. 

The Development of Government in Illinois. 
Ethel Glover Hatfield (Mrs. Henry R. Hatfield), Berkeley, Cal. 

The Department of the Interior. 
Anna Long Dolman Inskeep, 1050 E. Thirtieth St., Oakland, Cal. 

Local Government in California to 1879. 

1899 Samuel Childs Mitchell, Professor of History and PoUtical Science, 

University of Richmond, Richmond, Va. 
The Change from Colony to Commonwealth in Virginia. 

1901 Sophonisba Preston. ^liECKiNRiDGE, Associate Professor of Social Econ- 

omy in the Depaj^ent of Household Administration, University 
of Chicago, Chicftgo, HI. 
Legal Tender: A Study in English and American Monetary History. 

1902 Jeremiah Simeon Young, Professor of History and Political Science, 

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Cumberland Road. 
1905 Walter Fairleigh Dodd, Legislative Reference Bureau, Springfield, 111 
The State Governments of the American Revolution. 

1907 Ira Calvert Hamilton, Mt. Greenwood, 111. 

The History of Administration in Illinois. 
Augustus Raymond Hatton, Professor of Political Science, Western 
Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. 
An Introduction to the Study of Civil Service Reform in the United 
States. 

1908 Samuel MacClintock, Editorial Adviser, Department of Commerce, 

Washington, D.C. 
Federal Legislation Regarding Aliens. 
Susan Wade Peabody, 5515 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. 
The Relation of Government to Pubhc Health. 
1915 fELDON Cobb Evans. 

The History of the Australian Ballot in the United States 
1918 Kirk Harold Porter, Assistant Professor of Political Science, State 
University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
A History of Suffrage in the United States. 

t Deceased. 



16 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1921 Christen Jensen, Professor of Political Science, Brigham Young Uni- 
versity, Provo, Utah. 
The Pardoning Power in the American States. 
Leonard Dupee White, Associate Professor of Political Science, Uni- 
versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Origin of Utility Commissions in Massachusetts. 

HISTORY 

1895 John William Perrin, Librarian, Case Library, Cleveland, Ohio. 

The History of Compulsory Education in New England. 

James Westfall Thompson, Professor of Medieval History, University 
of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Development of the French Monarchy under Louis VI. 

1896 tGEORGE Pierce Garrison. 

History of Federal Control of Congressional Elections. 

1897 James Fosdick Baldwin, Professor of History, Vassar College, Pough- 

keepsie, N.Y. 
Scutage and Knight Service. 

Charles Trxjman Wyckoff, Professor and Head of the Department of 
History, Bradley Polytechnic Institute, Peoria, 111. 
The Feudal Relations between the Crowns of England and Scotland 
under the Early Plantagenets. 

1898 Ernest Alanson Balch, Professor of History, Kalamazoo College, 

Kalamazoo, Mich. 
Recent Phases of Reciprocity in the United States. 

James Walter Fertig, President, State Normal School, Murfreesboro,Tenn. 
Secession and Reconstruction of Tennessee. 

Cora Louise Scofield, College Club, Boston, Mass. 
Studies in the Court of Star Chamber. 

1899 t William Rullkoetter. 

Legal Protection of Women in Ancient German Society. 

Henry Lawrence Schoolcraft, 208 S. La Salle St., Chicago, 111. 
The Genesis of the Grand Remonstrance. 

1900 Frank George Franklin, Librarian, Willamette University, Salem, 

Ore. 
Naturalization in the United States with Especial Reference to Its 
Legislative History from the Declaration of Independence to the 
Civil War. 

Walter Flavius McCaleb, Vice-President and Manager, Co-operative 
National Bank, Cleveland, Ohio. 
The Aaron Burr Conspiracy. 

Edwin Erle Sparks, Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa. 
The Cumberland National Road as a Union-Making Factor. 

1901 Norman Dwight Harris, Professor and Head of the Department of 

PoUtical Science, Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. 
The History of Negro Servitude and Slavery Agitation in Illinois. 

Paul Frederick Peck, Professor of History, Iowa College, Grinnell, Iowa. 
The Development of the Theory of Succession under the Early 
Norman Kings. 

George Clarke Sellery, Professor of History and Dean of the College of 
Liberal Arts, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 
The Suspension of Habeas Corpus during the Civil War. 

t Deceased 



SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP 17 

1901 John Olaf Sethre, Teacher, Carlisle, Minn. 

The Political History of Minnesota Prior to Her Admission into the 
Union. 

1902 fRALPH Charles Henry Catterall. 

The Second United States Bank. 
Regina Katharine Crandall, Professor of English, Bryn Mawr College, 
Bryn Mawr, Pa. 
Genet's Mission. 
Elmer Cummings Griffith, Professor of History, University of Cincin- 
nati, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
The Rise and the Development of the Gerrymander. 
Edgar Holmes McNeal, Professor of European History, Ohio State 
University, Columbus, Ohio. 
Minores and Mediocres in German Tribal Codes. 
1904 Frances Gardiner Davenport, Assistant in the Bureau of Historical 
Research, Carnegie Institution, Washington, D.C. 
The Economic Development of a Norfolk Manor, 1086-1565. 
William Ray Manning, Economist, Division of Latin-American Affairs, 
Department of State, Washington, D.C. 
The Nootka Sound Controversy. 
Charles Oscar Patjllin, Carnegie Institution, Washington, D.C. 

The Administration of the Department of the Navy during the 
Revolution. 

1906 Julian Pleasant Bretz, Professor of History, Cornell University, Ithaca, 

N.Y. 
The Extension of the Postal System West of the Alleghanies. 
Marcus Wilson Jernegan, Professor of History, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Development of Elementary and Secondary Education in Eng- 
, land from the Reformation to the Great Civil War. 
Edward Benjamin Krehbiel, Sacramento, Cal. 
The Interdict under Innocent III. 

1907 Henry Smith, Professor of History, Goshen College, Goshen, Ind. 

The Mennonites in Pennsylvania. 
Walter Robinson Smith, Professor of Sociology, University of Kansas, 
Lawrence, Kan. 
A History of Dueling in the United States. 

1908 George Lane Melton, 106 N. Brauceforte St., Santa Cruz, Cal. 

The Development of the Lake Superior Iron Region. 
MiLO Milton Quaife, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, Wis. 
The Doctrine of Non-intervention with Slavery. 

1910 David Richard Moore, Professor of History, Oberlin College, Oberlin, 

Ohio. 
Canada and the United States, 1815-30. 
Schuyler Baldwin Terry, Chicago Manager, Kissel, Kinnicutt & Co., 

Chicago, 111. 
The Financing of the Hundred Years' War. 

1911 James Garfield Randall, Assistant Professor of History, University of 

Illinois, Urbana, 111. 
Confiscation of Property during the Civil War. 
IElmer Arthur Riley. 

Development of Chicago and Vicinity as a Manufacturing Center. 

1912 Dice Robins Anderson, President, Randolph-Macon Woman's College, 

Lynchburg, Va. 
WilUam Branch Giles: A Biography. 

t Deceased. 



18 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1913 Cleo Carson Hearon, Professor of History, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, 

Ga. 
Mississippi and the Compromise of 1850. 
JuDSON FisKE Lee, Chicago, 111. 

Transportation as a Factor in the Development of IlUnois. 
Hbinrich Herman Maurer, Professor of History, Lewis Institute, Chi- 
cago, III. 
Feudal Procedure in the Courts of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. 

1914 Catharine Caroline Cleveland, 4807 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, 111. 

The Great Revival in the West, 1797-1805. 
WiLMER Carlyle Harris, Professor and Head of the Department of 
History and Political Science, Butler College, Indianapolis, Ind. 
The Public Career of Zachariah Chandler. 
Theodore Calvin Pease, Assistant Professor of History and Dean of 
School of Liberal Arts, University of Illinois, Urbana, 111. 
John Lilburne and the Levellers. 

1915 Theodore Henley Jack, Professor of History and Dean of the College, 

Emory University, Atlanta, Ga. 
Sectionalism and Party Politics in Alabama to 1842. 
Reginald Charles McGrane, Professor of History, University of 
Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
The Panic of 1837. 
Charles Hartshorn Maxson, Assistant Professor of Political Science, 
Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. 
The Great Awakening in the Middle Colonies. 

1916 Glenn Vernon Burroughs, Assistant Professor of History and Political 

Science, University of Montana, Missoula, Mont. 
Development of State Constitutions, 1776 to 1851. 
Charles Oscar Hardy, Assistant Professor of Financial Organization 
in the School of Commerce and Administration, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Negro Question in the French Revolution. 
Donald McFayden, Professor of History, Washington University, 
St. Louis, Mo. 
The Evolution of the Title "Emperor." 
Norman Saleb Parker, Lawyer, Chicago, 111. 

The Commerce of Southern France from 1100-1450. 
Arthur Pearson Scott, Assistant Professor of History, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
History of the Criminal Law in Colonial Virginia. 
Francis Joseph Tschan, Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
Some Aspects of the Economic History of Virginia in the Eighteenth 
Century. 

1917 IHelen Boyce. 

The Mines of the Upper Harz under Duke Henry of Brunswick and 
His Son Julius. 
Henry Clyde Hubbart, Professor of History, Ohio Wesleyan College, 
Delaware, Ohio. 
The Conflict in the Northwest, 1845-65. 
Laura Amanda White, Professor of History, University of Wyoming, 
Laramie, Wyo. 
The Life of Barnwell Rhett. 
1919 Susan Madeline Lough, Professor and Head of the Department of 
History, Northampton College, Richmond, Va. 
The English Government of Ireland during the Reign of Queen 
Ehzabeth. 
Rachel Caroline Eaton, Claremont, Okla. 
John Ross and the Cherokee Indians, 
t Deceased. 



SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP 19 

1920 EiNAR JoRANSON, Instructor in History, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 

The Danegeld in France. 
Derwent Stainthorpe Whittlesey, Assistant Professor of Geography, 
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
A History of the Springfield Arsenal. 

1921 Chester Jacob Attig, Professor of History, Northwestern College, 

Naperville, 111. 
The Institutional History of the Northwest Territory 1787-1802. 
Albert Burton Moore, Associate Professor of History, Iowa State 

College, Ames, Iowa. 
Conscription in the Confederacy. 

SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY 

1895 Jerome Hall Raymond, Lecturer, Evanston, 111. 

American Municipal Government. 
fFREDERiCK William Sanders. 

An Exposition in Outline of the Relation of Certain Economic Prin- 
ciples to Social Readjustment. 

1896 William Isaac Thomas, New York City. 

On a Difference of the Metabolism of the Sexes. 
George Edgar Vincent, President, Rockefeller Foundation, New York 
City. 
Sociology and the Integration of Studies. 

1897 David Prescott Barrows, President, University of California, Berkeley, 

Cal. 
The Ethno-Botany of the Coahuila Indians of Southern California. 
Hannah Belle Clark (Mrs. Ambrose V. Powell), 5227 Blackstone 
Ave., Chicago, 111. 
The PubHc Schools of Chicago: A Sociological Study. 
Merton Leland Miller, International Banking Corporation, Celu, 
Philippine Islands. 
A Preliminary Study of the Pueblo of Taos. 
Paul Monroe, Professor of the History of Teaching, Teachers College, 
Columbia University, New York City. 
Profit Sharing: A Study in Social Economics. 

1898 Ira Woods Howerth, Professor and Head of the Department of Sociology 

and Economics, Colorado State Teachers College, Greeley, Colo. 
The Social Aim in Education. 

1899 Charges Abram Ellwood, Professor of Sociology, University of Mis- 

souri, Columbia, Mo. 
Some Prolegomena to Social Psychology. 

1900 Jacob Dorsey Forrest, Corporation Executive, Indianapolis, Ind. 

The Development of Industrial Organizations. 
Annie Marion MacLean, Writer, 902 Elmwood Ave., Evanston, 111. 
The Acadian Element in the Population of Nova Scotia. 

1901 Charles Joseph Bushnell, Professor of Sociology, University of Toledo, 

Toledo, Ohio. 
A Study of the Stock Yards Community at Chicago, as a Typical 
Example of the Bearing of Modern Industry upon Democracy, with 
Constructive Suggestions. 
John Morris Gillette, Professor of Sociology, University of North 
Dakota, University P.O., N.D. 
The Culture Agencies of a Typical Manufacturing Group, South 
Chicago. 
William Clarke Gordon, Pastor, East Congregational Church, Ware, 
Mass. 
The Social Ideals of Alfred Tennyson as Related to His Time. 
t Deceased. 



20 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1902 Edward Cary Hayes, Professor of Sociology, University of Illinois, 

Urbana, 111. 
The Sociologist's Object of Attention. 

1903 Amy Hewes, Professor of Sociology, Mount Holyoke College, South Had- 

ley, Mass. 
The Part of Invention in the Social Process. 

1904 RoMANzo Colfax Adams, Professor of Sociology, University of Hawaii, 

Honolulu, P.I. 

A Technique for Sociological Research. 
Thomas Jambs Riley, General Secretary, Bureau of Charities, Brook- 
lyn, N.Y. 

A Study of the Higher Life of Chicago. 

1905 Herbert Easton Fleming, Assistant Director, Bureau of Commercial 

Economics, Chicago, 111. 
Some Phases of the Production and Consumption of Literature in 
Chicago. 

1906 Eben Mumford, State Leader of County Agricultural Agents, East 

Lansing, Mich. 
The Beginnings of Authority. 
Mabel Carter Rhoades, 406 Walnut Place, Syracuse, N.Y. 

A Case Study of Delinquent Boys in the Juvenile Court of Chicago. 

Erville Bartlett Woods, Professor of Sociology, Dartmouth College, 
Hanover, N.H. 
Progress as a Sociological Concept. 

1907 GusTAVUS Walker Dyer, Professor of Sociology, Vanderbilt University, 

Nashville, Tenn. 
Democracy in the South before the Civil War. 

fHoWARD WOODHEAD. 

The Social Significance of the Physical Development of Cities. 

1908 Cecil Clare North, Professor of Sociology, Ohio State University, 

Columbus, Ohio. 
The Influence of Modern Social Relations upon Ethical Concepts. 

1910 Luther Lee Bernard, Professor of Sociology, University of Minnesota, 

Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Transition to an Objective Standard of Social Control. 

Frances Fenton (Mrs. L. L. Bernard), Assistant Professor of Economics, 
Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass. 
The Influence of Newspaper Presentations upon the Growth of Crime 
and Other Antisocial Activity. 
Hector MacPherson, Professor of Economics and Sociology, Oregon 
Agricultural College, Corvallis, Ore. 
Co-operative Credit Associations in the Province of Quebec. 

1911 Emory Stephen Bogardxjs, Professor of Sociology and Political Economy, 

University of Southern California, Los Angeles, Cal. 
The Relation of Fatigue to Industrial Accidents. 
SamuelNicholas Reep, Federal Land Bank, St. Paul, Minn. 
Social Policy of Chicago Churches. 

1912 Julius Temple House, Professor and Head of the Department of English 

and Sociology, Nebraska State Normal School, Wayne, Neb. 
Purpose the Variant of Theory. 

1913 Ernest Watson Burgess, Associate Professor of Sociology, University 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Function of Socialization in Social Evolution. 

Jesse Frederick Stbiner, Professor of Social Technology, University of 
North CaroUna, Chapel Hill, N.C. 
The Japanese in America. 

t Deceased. 



SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP 21 

1913 Edwin Hardin Sutherland, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University 

of IlUiiois, ITrbana, 111. 
Unemployment and Public Employment Agencies. 

1914 Manuel Conrad Elmer, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of 

Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
Social Surveys of Urban Communities. 

1915 Earle Edward Eubank, Professor of Sociology and Head of the Depart- 

ment of Social Science, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
A Study of Family Desertion. 

1917 Max Sylvius Handman, Professor of Sociology, University of Texas, 
Austin, Tex. 
The Beginnings of the Social Philosophy of Karl Marx. 

1919 Clarence Dan Blachley, 318 Maryland Ave., Washington, D.C. 

The Treatment of the Problem of Capital and Labor in Social Study 
Courses in the Churches. 
KisABURQ Kawabe, Department of Education, Tokyo, Japan. 

The Japanese Newspaper and Its Relation to the Political Develop- 
ment of Modern Japan. 
Stuart Alfred Queen, Professor of Sociology, University of Kansas, 
Lawrence, Kan. 
The Passing of the County Jail. 
Edward Byron Reuter, Associate Professor of Sociology, State Uni- 
versity of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
The Mulatto in the United States: a Sociological and Psychological 
Study. 
Raleigh Webster Stone, Assistant Professor of Economics, State 
University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
The Origin of the Survey Movement. 

1920 Walter Blaine Bodenhafer, Professor of Sociology, Washington L^ni- 

versity, St. Louis, Mo. 
The Comparative Role of the Group Concept in Ward's Dynamic 
- Sociology and Contemporary Sociology. 
MoLLiE Ray Carroll, Associate Professor and Chairman of the Depart- 
ment of Sociology and Economics, Goucher College, Baltimore, Md. 
The Attitude of the American Federation of Labor toward Legislation 
and Politics. 
Jacob Horak, Instructor in Sociology, Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa. 

The Assimilation of Czechs in Chicago. 
Howard Eikenberry Jensen, Professor of Sociology, Butler College, 
Indianapolis, Ind. 
The Rise of Religious Journalism in the United States. 
William Carlson Smith, Associate Professor of Sociology, University 
of Southern California, Los Angeles, Cal. 
Conflict and Fusion of Cultures as Typified by the Ao Nagas of India. 

1921 Roderick Duncan McKenzie, Associate Professor of Sociology, Univer- 

sity of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 
The Neighborhood: A Study of Local Life in Columbus, Ohio. 
Clarence Elmer Rainwater, Professor of Sociology, University of 
Southern California, Los Angeles, Cal. 
The Evolution of the Play Movement in the United States; Its 
Structure and Function. 
Samuel Caleb Ratcliffe, Instructor in Sociology, University of Illinois, 
Urbana, 111. 
Pauper Law and Institutions in Illinois. 
Dwight Sanderson, Professor of Sociology, Cornell University, Ithaca, 
N.Y. 
The Rural Community: A Social Unit. 



22 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

HISTORY OF ART 

1905 Caroline Louise Ransom (Mrs. Grant Williams), Chesbrough Dwellings, 

Toledo, Ohio. 
Greek and Roman Beds. 

HOUSEHOLD ADMINISTRATION 

1906 tEoNA Daisy Day (Mrs. A. L. Hyde). 

The Digestibility of Starch as Affected by Cooking. 

1918 Minna Caroline Denton, Assistant Chief, Home Economics, State 
Relations Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, 
D.C. 
Changes in Food Value of Vegetables Due to Cooking. 

1921 Elizabeth Wilhelmina Miller, Professor and Head of Home Economics, 
Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa. 
The Effect of Certain Stimulating Substances on the Invertose 
Activity of Yeast. 

HOME ECONOMICS (FOOD CHEMISTRY) 

1918 Chi Che Wang, Head Chemist, Nelson Morris Memorial Institute for 
Medical Research, Chicago, 111. 
Chemistry of Chinese Preserved Eggs and Chinese Edible Birds' 

Nests. 

COMPARATIVE RELIGION 

1894 Edmund Buckley, Lecturer and Author on Art and Rehgion, Chicago, 111. 
Japanese Phallicism. 

1899 Elizabeth Laetitia Moon (Mrs. H. S. Conard), Grinnell, Iowa. 
Ideas of Future Life among the Algonquins. 

1904 Andrew Peter Fors, Pastor, Luther Bethel Church, Chicago, 111. 
The Ethical World-Conception of the Norse People. 

t Deceased. 



DIVINITY SCHOOL GROUP 
ORIENTAL LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES 

1893 fEiJi AsADA. 

The Hebrew Text of Zechariah I-VIII Compared with the Different 
Ancient Versions. 

1894 Theodore Gerald Soares, Professor of Homiletics and Religious Educa- 

tion, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
A Contribution to the Criticism of the Books of Chronicles. 

1895 George Ricker Berry, Professor of Hebrew and Old Testament, Colgate 

University, Hamilton, N.Y. 
The Letters of the Rassam II Collection. 

Lincoln Hulley, President, John B. Stetson University, Deland, Fla. 
The Decalogue: A Growth in Form and Ideas. 

fDEAN Augustus Walker. 

The Semitic Negative with Special Reference to the Negative in 
Hebrew. 

1896 Herbert Lockwood Willett, Sr., Professor of Old Testament Language 

and Literature, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Development of the Doctrine of Immortality among the Hebrews. 

1897 t James Henry Stevenson. 

Assyrian and Babylonian Contracts, with Phoenician Dockets. 

1898 Philip. Castor Baird, Clergyman, United Presbyterian Church, Okla- 

homa City, Okla. 
The Method of the Prophets. 

Fulton Johnson Coffin, President of College, Isle of Trinidad. 
The Third Commandment. 

Hayden Evan Jones, Assistant Superintendent, Morgan Park Military 
Academy, Morgan Park, 111. 
Selected Assyrian Letters. 

1899 William Nelson Mebane, Presbyterian Minister, Dublin, Va. 

Assyrian Letters. 

Joseph Kahn Arnold, President, The Record Press, 525 S. Dearborn 
St., Chicago, 111. 
The Balaam Utterances in Strophe. 

John Merlin Powis Smith, Professor of Old Testament Language and 
Literature, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
History of the Idea of the Day of Yahweh. 

1900 Alois Barta, Professor of Old Testament, German Theological Seminary, 

Dubuque, Iowa. 
The Syntax of the Sentence in Isaiah XL-LXVI. 

1901 Clifton Daggett Gray, President, Bates College, Lewiston, Me. 

The Shamash Religious Texts. 

t Deceased. 

23 



24 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1901 Frederick Thomas Kelly, Assistant Professor of Hebrew, University of 

Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 
The Strophic Structure of Habakkuk. 

1902 Preston Pishon Bruce, County Superintendent of Schools, Reliance, 

S.D. 
Hymns and Prayers to Marduk. 

Oscar Ttjnstal Morgan, Clergyman, Glendale, Ore. 
The Wisdom Element in the Prophets. 

fEMMANUEL Schmidt. 

The Temple of Solomon in the Light of Other Oriental Temples. 

1903 Franklin Pierce Ramsay, Writer, 280 Bement Ave., West New Brighton, 

Staten Island, N.Y. 
The Use of Blood in the Pentateuch. 

1904 fWiLLiAM Caldwell. 

The Doctrine of Creation in the Old Testament. 

1905 Allen Howard Godbey, Methodist Clergyman, Carrsville, Ky. 

Political, Religious, and Social Antiquities of the Sargonid Period. 

John Rothwell Slater, Professor, University of Rochester, Rochester, 
N.Y. 
The Sources of Tyndale's Version of the Pentateuch. 

Olaf Alfred Toffteen, President, Scandia Academy, Chicago, 111. 
The Geography of the Letters of the Kouyunjik Collection. 

1907 Charles Ellsworth Horne, Dean, College of Agriculture and Mechanic 

Arts, University of Porto Rico, Mayaguez, Porto Rico. 
Personal Names in the Sargon Letters. 

Daniel David Luckenbill, Associate Professor of the Semitic Languages 
and Literatures, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
A Study of the Temple Documents of the Cassite Period. 

Robert James George McKnight, Professor, Pittsburgh, Pa. 

Selected Letters from the Sargon Period with Philological Notes. 

1908 Rowland Hector Mode, care of John Stark & Co., Toronto, Canada. 

Babylonian Tablets in the Haskell Museum. 

1909 Rebecca Corwin, Professor of Bible, Randolph-Macon Woman's College, 

Roanoke, Va. 
The Verb and the Sentence in Chronicles, Ezra, and Nehemiah: A 
Study in Syntax. 

Ivan Lee Holt, Clergyman, St. Louis, Mo. 

The Contract Tablets in the RCT Collection in the Haskell Museum. 

George Alfred Peckham, Professor of Old Testament, Hiram College, 
Hiram, Ohio. 
Critical Commentary on Obadiah. 

1912 Caroline May Breyfogle, Dean of Women, Ohio State University, 
Columbus, Ohio. 
The Hebrew Sense of Sin in the Pre-Exilic Period. 

Isaac George Matthews, Professor of Old Testament Language and 
Literature, Crozer Theological Seminary, Chester, Pa. 
The Jewish Apologetic to the Gentile World. 

Leroy Waterman, Professor of Semitics, University of Michigan, Ann 
Arbor, Mich. 
Selected Assyrian Letters; Texts, Transhterations, Translations, with 
Textual Notes. 

t Deceased. 



THE DIVINITY SCHOOL 25 

Harold Hayden Nelson. 
The Battle of Megiddo. 

David Edward Thomas, Congregational University Pastor, University 
of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. 
The Psychological Approach to the Study of Prophecy. 

Carl Gaenssle, Professor of Classics, Concordia College, Milwaukee, Wis. 
The Hebrew Particle ntJN . 

Thomas George Allen, Secretary of Haskell Museum and Oriental 
Institute, and Assistant Professor of Egyptology, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Horus in the Pyramid Texts. 

Theophile James Meek, Professor of Semitic Languages and History of 
Religion, Bryn Mawr College, Biyn Mawr, Pa. 
Some Legal and Business Documents from the Time of the First 
Dynasty of Babylon. 

Martin Sprengling, Assistant Professor of the Semitic Languages and 
Litei-atures, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Syriac Prosody and Antonius Rhetor the Tagritensian. 

John Albert Maynard, Secretary, Assyrian Dictionary Staff, University 
of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Studies in Religious Texts from Assur. 

Felix Alexander Levy, 707 Melrose St., Chicago, 111. 
The Royal Obelisks of Egypt. 

Harry Linfield, Fellow, Dropsie College, Philadelphia, Pa. 
The Relation of Jewish to Babylonian Law. 

August Henry Pruessner, Clergyman, Java. 
Date-Culture in Ancient Babylonia. 

NEW TESTAMENT LITERATURE AND INTERPRETATION 

Clyde Weber Votaw, Professor of New Testament Literature, University 
of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Use of the Infinitive in Biblical Greek. 

Edgar Johnson Goodspeed, Professor of Biblical and Patristic Greek, 
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Newberry Gospels. 

. Henry Martyn Herrick, Associate Professor of Modern Languages, 
Rockford College, Rockford, 111. 
The Kingdom of God in the Writings of the Fathers. 

Gerald Dirk Heuver, Pastor, Third Presbyterian Chm-ch, Rockford, 111. 
The Teachings of Jesus Concerning Wealth. 

Allan Hoben, President, Kalamazoo College, Kalamazoo, Mich. 
The Virgin Birth. 

Alphonzo Augustus Hobson, Pastor, First Baptist Church, Milwaukee, 
Wis. 
The Diatessaron of Tatian and the Synoptic Problem. 

Irving Francis Wood, Professor of Biblical Literature and Comparative 
ReUgion, Smith College, Northampton, Mass. 
The Spirit of God in Biblical Literature. 



26 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1904 John William Bailet, President, Colorado Woman's College, Denver, 

Colo. 
Does Hellenism Contribute Constituent Elements to Paul's Chris- 
tology ? 

Benjamin Willard Robinson, Professor of New Testament Literature 
and Interpretation, Chicago Theological Seminary, Chicago, 111. 
Some Elements of Forcefulness in the Comparisons of Jesus. 

1905 Hamilton Ford Allen, Professor and Head of Dept. of Romance 

Languages, Washington and Jefferson College, Washington, Pa. 
The Use of the Infinitive in Polybius Compared with the Use of the 
Infinitive in Biblical Greek. 

1906 William Duncan Ferguson, Financial Secretary, Pikeville College, 

Pikeville, Ky. 
The Legal and Governmental Terms Common to the Macedonian 
Greek Inscriptions and the New Testament (with a complete index 
of the Macedonian inscriptions). 

Frederick Owen Norton, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, Drake 
University, Des Moines, Iowa. 
A Lexicographical and Historical Study of AIA0HKH. 

Henry Burton Sharman, Author and Lecturer, Toronto, Ontario, 
Canada. 
The Teaching of Jesus about the Future According to the Synoptic 
Gospels. 

Effie Freeman Thompson, Professor, Kingston, N.Y. 

METANOEfl and METAMEAEI in Greek Literature until 100 a.d., 
Including a Discussion of Their Cognates and of Their Hebrew 
Equivalents. 

1907 Frank Grant Lewis, Librarian, Crozer Theological Seminary, and 

American Baptist Historical Society, Chester, Pa. 
Irenaeus' Testimony to the Fourth Gospel; Its Extent, Meaning, and 
Value. 

Henry Barton Robison, Professor, Culver-Stockton College, Canton, 
Mo. 

The Syntax of the Participle in the Apostolic Fathers. 
Calvin Klopp Staudt. 

The Idea of the Resurrection in the Ante-Nicene Period. 

1908 Charles Bray Williams, President, Howard College, Birmingham, Ala. 

The Participle in the Book of Acts. 

1909 John Cowper Granbery, Professor, Southwestern University, George- 

town, Tex. 
Outline of New Testament Christology. 

1910 Harris Lachlan MacNeill, Professor, Brandon College, Brandon, 

Manitoba, Canada. 
The Christology of the Epistle to the Hebrews (Including Its Relation 
to the Developing Christology of the Primitive Church). 

1911 Alonzo Rosecrans Stark, Clergyman, First Baptist Church, Cam- 

bridge, Mass. 
The Christology in the Apostolic Fathers. 

1912 Ernest William Parsons, Professor, Rochester Theological Seminary, 

Rochester, N.Y. 
A Historical Examination of Some Non-Markan Elements in Luke. 

Dean Rockwell Wickes, Professor, American Board Mission, Tunghsien, 
China. 
The Sources of Luke's Perean Section. 



THE DIVINITY SCHOOL 27 

1913 Henry Beach Carre, Professor of Old Testament Language and Litera- 

ture, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. 
Paul's Doctrine of Redemption. 

1914 Chester Charlton McCown, Professor of New Testament, Pacific 

School of Religion, Berkeley, Cal. 
Testamentum Salomonis. 

1915 WiLLARD Haskell Robinson, Jr., President and Head of the Bible 

Department, Whitworth College, Spokane, Wash. 

The Problem of the Parables of Jesus. 
Alonzo Willard Fortune, Pastor, Central Christian Church, Lexing- 
ton, Ky. 

The Conception of Authority in the Pauline Writings. 

1916 Arthur Wakefield Slaten, Professor of Biblical Literature and Religious 

Education, William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo. 
The Qualitative Use of Nouns in the Pauhne Epistles, and Their 
Translation in the Revised Version. 
Elmer Harry Zaugg, Professor, North Japan College, Sendai, Japan. 
The Genetic Study of the Spirit-Phenomena in the New Testament. 

1917 Thomas Wearing, Principal, Woodstock College, Woodstock, Ontario, 

Canada. 
The World- View of the Fourth Gospel. 

1918 Alfred Morris Perry, Clergyman, Granby, Conn., and Lecturer at 

Hartford Theological Seminary, Hartford, Conn. 
The Sources of Luke's Passion-Narrative. 
Charles James Ritchey, Assistant Professor of History, Carleton 
College, Northfield, Minn. 
Quests for Salvation in New Testament Times. 
LeRoy Hahn Stafford, Wheaton, 111. 

The Function of Divine Manifestations in New Testament Times. 

1919 Jan Hendrik Jacobus Greyvenstein, Minister, Rhodes, South Africa. 

The Original "Teaching of the Twelve Apostles" : Its Text and Origin. 
George Arthur Martell, Paso Robles, Cal. 
Gnosticism and the Fourth Gospel. 

1920 Elbert Russell, Director, Woolman School, Swarthmore, Pa. 

Paronomasia and Kindred Phenomena in the New Testament. 

1921 Joseph Nicholas Reagan, 1039 West 32d St., Oklahoma City, Okla. 

Krjpvyna Uerpov, the Oldest Christian Apology. 

SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY 

1896 IEliphalet Allison Read. 

The Christian Idea of God in Its Relation to Theology. 

1899 Carl Delos Case, Clergyman, First Baptist Church, Oak Park, 111. 

The Incarnation and Modern Thought. 

1900 George Cross, Professor, Rochester Theological Seminary, Rochester, 

N.Y. 
The Theology of Schleiermacher. 
tJuLLiEN Avery Herrick. 

The Development and Significance of the Leben Jesu Literature. 

LoRAN David Osborn, Chancellor, Des Moines University, Des Moines, 
Iowa. 
The Recovery and Restatement of the Gospel. 
Arthur Maxson Smith, Associate Professor, Colgate University, Hamil- 
ton, N.Y. 
The Contribution of Thomas Aquinas to Modem Individualism. 

t Deceased. 



28 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1900 tHiRAM Van Kirk, Darien, Conn. 

Sources of the Theology of Alexander Campbell. 

1903 Wilfred Currier Keirstead, Professor of Philosophy and Economics, 

University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, N.B. 

The Theory of Knowledge of Albrecht Ritschl. 
William Ross Schoemaker, Clergyman, City Park Baptist Church, 
Denver, Colo. 

The Use of nil in the Old Testament and of Trvevixa in the New Testa- 
ment. 

1904 Arthur Erastus Holt, Secretary, Y.M.C.A., Kansas State Agricultural 

College, Manhattan, Kan. 
The Function and Method of Christian Ethics. 

1909 Douglas Clyde Macintosh, Professor, Yale Divinity School, New. 
Haven, Conn. 
The Reaction against Metaphysics in Theology. 

1912 Henry Burke Robins, Professor, Rochester Theological Seminary, 
Rochester, N.Y. 
The Basis of Assurance in Protestant Theology. 
Charles Manford Sharpe, Director, Detroit School of Religion, Detroit, 
Mich. 
The Function of the Scriptures in Current American Theology. 

1914 Ukichi Kawaguchi, Japan Baptist Theological Seminary, Tokyo, Japan. 

The Bearing of the Evolutionary Theory on the Conception of God. 

1915 Allan Worthington Cooke, Clergyman, Church of the Advent, Boston, 

Mass. 
The Social Psychology of the Sacraments. 
Arthur Clinton Watson, Professor, Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio. 
The Logic of Religious Reconstruction. 

1917 RiiCHiRO Hoashi, Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan. 

Problem of Omnipotence in Current Theology. 

1918 Albert Eustace Haydon, Assistant Professor of History of Religions, 

University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Conception of God in the Pragmatic Philosophy. 

William Charles Macdougall, Associate Principal, Disciples Mission 
Bible College, Jubbulpore, India. 
The "Way of Salvation" in the Ramayana of Tulsi Dasa. 

Angus Stewart Woodburnb, Madras Christian College, Madras, India. 
The Relation between Religion and Science: A Biological Approach. 

1920 Ralph Kendall Schwab, Minister, First Congregational Church, Rock 

Falls, 111. 
The History of the Doctrine of Christian Perfection in the Evangelical 
Association. 

1921 Archibald Gillies Baker, Assistant Professor of Missions, University 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Church and the Struggle for Democracy in Alto-Peru and 
Bolivia. 

CHURCH HISTORY 

1897 Winfred Ernest Garrison, Associate Professor of Church History and 
Dean of the Disciples' Divinity House, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Sources of Alexander Campbell's Theology. 

t Deceased. 



THE DIVINITY SCHOOL 29 

1899 Warren Palmer Behan, Professor of Bible and Religious Education, 

Ottawa l^niversity, Ottawa, Kan. 
Social Work of the Church of Plymouth Colony, 1620-1691. 

1900 Wallace St. John, Baptist College, Rangoon, Burma. 

The Contest for Liberty of Conscience in England. 

1902 Errett Gates, Lawyer, Department of Industrial Relations, Armour 
& Co., Chicago, 111. 
The Early Relation and Separation of Baptists and Disciples. 

1905 William Henry Allison, Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Colgate 

University, Hamilton, N.Y. 
Baptist Councils in America. 

1906 RoLvix Harlan, Secretary of the Rural Church Commission, American 

Baptist Home Mission Society, New York, N.Y. 
The Christian CathoUc Church in Zion. 

1913 Chester William New, Professor of History, McMaster University, 

Toronto, Canada. 
A History of the Alien Priories in England to the Confiscation by 
Henry V. 

1914 Peter George Mode, Assistant Professor of Church History, LTniversity 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Influence of the Black Death on the English Monasteries. 

1915 Arthur Henry Hirsch, Professor and Head of the Department of 

History, Ohio Wesleyan College, Delaware, Ohio. 
The Huguenots in South Carolina. 

1919 Lyford Paterson Edwards, Associate Professor of Sociology, St. 

Stephen's College, Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y. 
The Transformation of Early Christianity from an Eschatological to 
a Socialized Movement. 

Daniel C. Holtom, Professor, Japan Baptist Theological Seminary, 
30 Tsukiji, Tokyo, Japan. 
The Political Philosophy of Modern Shinto: A Problem in Christian 
Missions. 

1920 John Thomas McNeill, Queen's University, Kingston, Canada. 

The Celtic Penitentials and Their Influence on Continental Chris- 
tianity. 

RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 

1909 Herbert Francis Evans, Professor of Rehgious Education, Pacific 
School of Religion, Berkeley, Cal. 
Religious and Moral Education through the Periodical Press. 
1911 Arthur Jackson Hall, Professor of Psychology, Baylor University, 
Waco, Tex. 
Religious Education in the Public Schools of the State and City of 
New York. 
1913 Frank Otis Erb, Educational Secretary of the American Baptist Publica- 
tion Society, Philadelphia, Pa. 
The Development of the Young People's Movement in Modern Chris- 
tianity. 
William Norman Hutchins, Pastor, First Baptist Church, Kentville, 
Nova Scotia. 
Social Service in Religious Education. 
Katsuji Kato, Y.M.C.A. Secretary for Japanese Students in America, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Psychology of the Religious Experience of Tjrpical Japanese 
Christians. 



30 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1914 Daniel Johnson Fleming, Professor of Missions, Union Theological 

Seminary, New York, N.Y. 
The Development of an Autonomous Church in India. 

Adrian Augustus Holtz, General Secretary, Y.M.C.A., Kansas State 
Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kan. 
The Moral and Religious Element in American Education to 1800. 

Herbert Finley Rudd, Professor of Psychology, New Hampshire State 
College, Durham, N.H. 
The Chinese Moral Sentiments before Confucius: A Study in the 
Origin of Ethical Valuation. 

1915 Addie Grace Wardle, Superintendent of Deaconess Home and Com- 

munity House, Cleveland, Ohio. 
The History of the Sunday School in the Methodist Church. 

SOCIOLOGY 

1903 Frank Graves Cresset, Director, Ohio Baptist Board of Promotion, 
Granville, Ohio. 
The Church and the Young Man. 

1905 Richard Roy Perkins, General Secretary, Y.M.C.A., San Francisco, Cal. 
The Treatment of Juvenile Dehnquents. 

Albert Judson Steelman, Professor, Union Evangelical Seminary, Rio 
Piedras, Porto Rico. 
Charities for Children in the City of Mexico. 

1913 Norman Joseph Ware, Professor of Applied Sociology, University of 
Louisville, Louisville, Ky. 
An Instrumental Interpretation of Social Theory: "L'Ordre naturel et 
essentiel des societes politiques" of Le Mercier de La Riv6re; 
Physiocrat. 

1919 Lorenzo Dow Weyand, Professor of Sociology, William Jewell College, 
Liberty, Mo. 
A Study of Wage Payment to Prisoners as a Penal Method. 



CLASSICAL GROUP 

GREEK 

1895 William Arthur Heidel, Professor of Greek, Wesleyan University, 
Middleton, Conn. 
Pseudo-PIatonica. 

WiLMER Cave France (Mrs. J. E. Wright), Professor of Greek, Bryn 
Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pa. 
The Emperor Julian's Relation to the New Sophistic and Neo- 
Platonism: With a Study of His Style. 

1897 tCHARLES William Seidenadel. 

Quid de musicae universae eiusque ahquot partium singularum 
potestate rjdos aut Tados et exprimendi et efficiendi veterum Graeco- 
rum scriptores, imprimis Plato nee non Aristoteles iudicarint. 

1898 Theodore Chanlon Burgess, Director, Bradley Institute, Peoria, 111. 

Epideictic Literature. 

1900 fHERBERT Morse Burchard. 

Homeric Influence on the Palatine Anthology. 

George Norlin, President, University of Colorado, Boulder Colo. 
Cosmogenical Theories of the Greeks. 

George Washington Paschal, Associate Professor of Greek and Latin, 
Wake Forest College, Wake Forest, N.C. 
A Study of Quintus of Smyrna. 

1901 Clara Elizabeth Millerd (Mrs. Smertenko), Grinnell, Iowa. 

On the Interpretation of Empedocles. 

William Bishop Owen, Principal, Chicago Normal School, Chicago, 111. 
The Custom and Laws of Naturalization at Athens. 

1903 Geneva Misener, Associate Professor of Classics, University of Alberta, 

Edmonton, Alta. 
The Meaning of Tap. 

1904 Robert Johnson Bonner, Professor of Greek, University of Chicago, 

Chicago, 111. 
Evidence in Athenian Courts. 

Roy Caston Flickinger, Professor of Greek and Latin and Dean of the 
College of Liberal Arts, Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. 
Plutarch as a Source of Information on the Greek Theater. 

David Moore Robinson, Professor of Classical Archaeology, Johns 
Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. 
Ancient Sinope. 

LaRue Van Hook, Professor of Classical Philology, Columbia University, 
New York City. 
The Metaphorical Terminology of Greek Rhetoric and Literary 
Criticism. 

1905 Frank Winans Dignan, LaSalle Extension University, Chicago, 111. 

The Idle Actor in Aeschylus. 

1906 Kelley Rees, Broker, 514 S. 42nd St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

The Rule of Three Actors in the Classical Greek Drama, 

t Deceased. 

31 



32 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1907 Anna Bates Hersman, 5577 Cabanne Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 

Studies in Greek Allegorical Interpretation. 

1908 Frederick Leroy Htjtson, Assistant Professor of Classics, Princeton 

University, Princeton, N.J. 
Sparta in Greek Opinion. 

1910 Arthur Leslie Keith, Professor of Greek, University of South Dakota, 

Vermilion, S.D. 
Simile and Metaphor in Greek Poetry, from Homer to Aeschylus. 

1911 Hazel Louise Brown, Harrison Technical High School, Chicago, 111. 

Extemporary Speech in Antiquity. 
George Miller Calhoun, Associate Professor of Greek, University of 
CaUfornia, Berkeley, Cal. 
Athenian Clubs in Politics and Litigation. 
Frank Egleston Robbins, Assistant to the President, University of 
Michigan, Ann Arbor Mich. 
The Hexaemeral Literature; a Study of the Greek and Latin Com- 
mentaries on Genesis. 

1912 Ethel Ella Beers, Teacher, McKinley High School, Chicago, 111. 

Euripides and Later Greek Thought. 
Robert Alexander MacLean, Lecturer in Classics, McGill University, 
Montreal, Can. 
Periphrasis in Attic Tragedy. 

1913 John Walter Beardslee, Jr., Professor of Greek and New Testament 

Exegesis, Theological Seminary, New Brunswick, N.J. 
The Use of 4>vais in Fifth-Century Greek Literature. 
Emily Helen Button, Professor of Classics, Tennessee College, Mur- 
freesboro, Tenn. 
Studies in Greek Prepositional Phrases. 
John Leonard Hancock, Instructor in Latin and Greek, University of 
Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. 
Studies in Stichomythia. 
John Emory Hollingsworth, Professor of Greek and Latin, Washburn 
College, Topeka, Kan. 
Antithesis in Attic Orators from Antiphon to Isaeus. 
Roger Miller Jones, Assistant Professor of Greek, University of 
California, Berkeley, Cal. 
The Platonism of Plutarch. 
Robert Christian Kissling, Professor and Head of Classical Languages, 
State Teachers College, Cape Girardeau, Mo. 
Philosophy of Synesius of Cyrene. 
Albert Augustus Trever, Professor of Greek, Lawrence College, 
Appleton, Wis. 
A History of Greek Economic Thought. 

1914 John Oscar Lofberg, Associate Professor of Classics, Queen's University, 

Kingston, Ontario. 
Sycophancy in Athens. 
George Newton Sleight, Superintendent of Schools, St. Petersburg, Fla. 
Themistius: Life, Style, and Thought. 

1915 Grace Hadley Billings (Mrs. T. H.), Cambridge, England. 

The Art of Transition in Plato. 
Thomas Henry Billings, Cambridge, England. 

The Platonism of Philo Judaeus. 
Heber Michael Hays, Fenger High School, Chicago, 111. 

Notes on the Works and Days of Hesiod with Introduction and 
Appendix. 



CLASSICAL GROUP 33 

1916 David Martin Key, Professor of Latin, Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss. 

Introduction of Characters by Personal Names in Greek and Roman 
Comedy. 
Frederick Smith, Associate Professor and Head of the Department of 
General Literature, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Tex. 
Athenian Political Commissions. 
Edwin Leodgar Theiss, Naperville, 111. 

Hostility to Plato in Antiquity. 
Eliza Gregory Wilkins, Assistant Professor of Classics, University of 
Colorado, Boulder, Colo. 
"Know Thyself" in Greek and Latin Literature. 

1917 fRoBERT Dale Elliott. 

Transition in the Attic Orators. 

1919 Margaret Brown O'Connor, St. Lou's, Mo. 

Facts of Greek Religion as Seen through the Medium of Tragedy. 
John Wilson Taylor, Assistant Professor of Greek and Latin, University 
of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man. 
Georgius Gemistus Pletho's Criticism of Plato and Aristotle. 

1920 William Dudley Woodhead, Assistant Professor of Greek, University 

of Toronto, Toronto, Ont. 
Etymology in Greek Literature. 

1921 Hartley Grant Robertson, Lecturer in Greek, Victoria College, Uni- 

versity of Toronto, Toronto, Ont. 
The Administration of Justice in the Athenian Empire. 
Gertrude Elizabeth Smith, Instructor in Greek, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Administration of Justice from Hesiod to Solon. 



LATIN 

1898 Fred B. R. Hellems, Professor of History of Art and Dean of the College 
of Liberal Arts, L^niversity of Colorado, Boulder, Colo. 
Lex de Imperio Vespasiani. 
Esther Boise Van Deman, Research Associate of the Carnegie Institute, 
Rome, Italy. 
The Cult of Vesta Publica and the Vestal Virgins. 
Arthur Tappan Walker, Professor of Latin, University of Kansas, 
Lawrence, Kan. 
The Sequence of Tenses in Latin. 

1900 Edward Ambrose Bechtel, Dean of the College of Arts and Science, 

Tulane University, New Orleans, La. 
Sanctae Silviae Peregrinatio. 
John Jacob Schlicher, Professor of Latin, University of Wisconsin, 
Madison, Wis. 
The Origin of Rhythmical Verse in Late Latin. 
Thomas Kay Sidey, Associate Professor of Latin and Greek, University 
of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 
The Participle in Plautus, Petronius, and Apuleius. 

1901 fTnoMAS Louis Comparette. 

The Inscriptional Hexameters. 
Frederick William Shipley, Professor of Latin, Washington University, 
St. Louis, Mo. 
Certain Sources of Corruption in Latin Manuscripts. 

t Deceased. 



34 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1901 William Frank Tibbetts, Curtis High School, New Brighton, Staten 

Island, N.Y. 
The Indicative Indirect Question in Latin. 

1902 George Crawford Swearingen, Mississippi Manager of the Phoenix 

Mutual Life Insurance Co., Jackson, Miss. 
A Study in the Manuscripts of Horace. 

1903 Tenney Frank, Professor of Latin, Johns Hopkins University, Balti- 

more, Md. 
Attraction of Mood in Early Latin. 

1904 Warren Stone Cordis, Professor of English, John B. Stetson University, 

De Land, Fla. 
The Estimates of Moral Values Expressed in Cicero's Letters. 

1905 IBernard Camillxjs Bondxjrant. 

Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus. 
Mary Jackson Kennedy, Laurel School, Cleveland, Ohio. 

The Literary Work of Ammianus. 
Mary Bradford Peaks, Attorney at Law, 165 Broadway, New York 
City. 
The General Civil and Military Administration of Noricum and 
Raetia. 

1906 Harold Lucius Axtell, Professor of Latin and Greek, University of 

Idaho, Moscow, Idaho. 

The Deification of Abstract Ideas in Roman Literature and In- 
scriptions. 
Norman Wentworth DeWitt, Professor of Latin, Victoria College, 
University of Toronto, Toronto, Can. 

The Dido Episode in the Aeneid of Virgil. 

1907 Draper Talman Schoonover, Professor of Latin and Dean, Marietta 

College, Marietta, Ohio. 
A Study of Cn. Domitius Corbulo as Found in the Annals of Tacitus. 

1908 Evan Taylor Sage, Professor and Head of the Department of Latin, 

University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Pseudo-Ciceronian Consolatio. 
Berthold Louis Ullman, Professor of Latin, State University of Iowa, 

Iowa City, Iowa. 
The Identification of the Manuscripts of Catullus Cited in Statins' 

Edition of 1566. 

1909 John Strayer McIntosh, Professor of Latin and Greek, Southern 

Methodist University, Dallas, Tex. 
A Study of Augustine's Version of Genesis. 

1911 Judson Allen Tolman, President, Howard Payne College, Brownsville, 

Tex. 
A Study of the Sepulchral Inscriptions in Buecheler's Carmina 
Epigraphica Latina. 

1912 James Burnett Eskridge, President, Oklahoma Agricultural and Me- 

chanical College, Stillwater, Okla. 
The Influence of Cicero upon Augustine in the Development of his 

Oratorical Theory for the Training of the Ecclesiastical Orator. 
Mason DeWitt Gray, Head of Classical Department, East High School, 

Rochester, N.Y. 
The Uses of Quin: Their Origin and Development. 

1913 Carlos Eben Allen, President, State Teachers College, Valley City, 

Latin Word Order as Seen in Caesar's GaUic War. 
t Deceased. 



CLASSICAL GROUP 35 

1913 Alice Freda Braunlich, Assistant Professor of Latin, Goucher College, 

Baltimore, Md. 
The Indicative Indu'ect Question in Latin. 
Frederick William Clark, Professor of Latin and Greek, University of 
Manitoba, Winnipeg, Can. 
The Influence of Sea-Power on the History of the Roman Republic. 
Clinton C. Conrad, Vice-Principal, University High School, Oakland, Cal. 
The Technique of Continuous Action in Roman Comedy. 

1914 KJEiTH Preston, Associate Professor of Latin, Northwestern University, 

Evanston, 111. 
Studies in the Diction of the Sermo Amatorius in Roman Comedy. 

1915 Bertha Ellis Booth, Hamilton, Mo. 

The Collocation of the Adverb of Degree in Roman Comedy and Cato. 

1916 Raymond Huntington Coon, Professor of Latin, William Jewell College, 

Liberty, Mo. 
The Foreigner in Hellenistic Comedy. 
Richard Orlando Jolliffe, Professor of Classics, Queen's University, 
Kingston, Can. 
Phases of Corruption in Roman Administration in the Last Half- 
Century of the Roman Republic. 
1918 Ira David Hyskell, 28 Nassau St., New York City. 
A Study of the Latinity of SoUnus. 

1920 Helen Hull Law, Professor of Latin and Greek, Meredith College, 

Raleigh, N.C. 
Studies in the Songs of Plautine Comedy. 
Joseph Clyde Murley, Assistant Professor of Classical Languages, 

Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. 
The Cults of Cisalpine Gaul as Seen in the Inscriptions. 

1921 Harold Bennett, Professor of Latin and Greek, College of Charleston, 

Charleston, S.C. 
Cinna and His Times. 
Blanche Elizabeth Mae Brotherton, Assistant Professor of Classics, 
Wheaton College, Norton, Mass. 
The Vocabulary of Intrigue in Roman Comedy. 

COMPARATIVE PHILOLOGY 

1896 Frank H. Fowler, Professor of Classical Languages, University of 
Arizona, Tucson, Ariz. 
The Negatives of the Indo-European Languages. 

fHENRY FaRRAR LiNSCOTT. 

The Latin Third Declension. A Study in Metaplasm and Syncretism. 
898 Helen McGaffey Searles, Professor of Latin, Mt. Holyoke College, 
South Hadley, Mass. 
A Lexicographical Study of the Greek Inscriptions. 

1900 Mary Belle Harris, Superintendent, State Home for Girls, Trenton, N.J. 

The Lyric of Kalidasa; Its Form and Subject Matter. 
John Jocob Meyer, Austraffe, Switzerland. 

Translation of the Dagakumaracaritam, with Introduction and Notes. 

1901 Edgar Howard Sturtevant, Irving National Bank, New York City. 

Contraction in the Case-forms of the Latin io- and id- Stems, and of 
deus, is and idem. 
1904 William Cyrus Gunnerson, Principal, Dozier School, St. Louis, Mo. 
History of U-Stems in Greek. 
tDeceased. 



36 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1904 Ivy Kellerman (Mrs. Edwin C. Reed), Washington, D.C. 

On the Syntax of Some Prepositions in the Greek Dialects. 
1907 Ghen-Ichiro Yoshioka, Professor of English and Comparative Philology, 
Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan. 
A Semantic Study of the Verbs of Doing and Making in the Indo- 
European Languages. 
1911 Carlos Everett Conant, Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, 
Carleton CoUege, Northfield, Minn. 
The Pepet Law in Philippine Languages. 
1918 Karl F. Muenzinger, Chicago, 111. 
Studies in Linguistic Psychology 
I. The Consciousness of Sameness of Speech-Sounds 
II. The Function of Imitation Sound-Changes. 
1920 Hans Kurath, Assistant Professor of German, Northwestern University, 
Evanston, 111. 
The Semantic Sources of the Words for the Emotions, in Sanskrit, 
Greek, Latin, and the Germanic Languages. 



MODERN LANGUAGE GROUP 

ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES 

1894 fRENF. DE Poyen-Bellisle. 

Les sons et les formes du Creole dans les Antilles. 

1896 Theodore Lee Neff, Associate Professor of French, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
La Satire des femmes dans la Poesie lyrique frangaise du moyen age. 

1897 Wilson Deane Crabb, Attorney at Law, Louisville, Ky. 

Culture History in the chanson de geste Aymeri de Narbonne. 

1898 Lisi Cecilia Cipriani, Writer, 5731 Harper Ave., Chicago, 111. 

Introduction to a Critical Edition of Gui de Bourgogne. 

1899 Andre B£ziat, Associate Professor of Romance Languages, Vanderbilt 

L^niversity, Nashville, Tenn. 
Etude sur le dialecte de Balansun, Basses Pyrenees. I, Phonetique. 

1900 Frederick Ernst Beckmann, Instructor in Modern Languages, High 

School, Seattle, Wash. 
Spanish Influence on Eichendorff. 
ISABELLE Bronk, Professor and Head of the Department of the French 

Language and Literature, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa. 
The Poesies diverses of Antoine Furetiere: A Partial Reprint from 

the Edition of 1664. Edited with Introduction, Notes, and 

Glossary. 
1903 Florence Nightingale Jones, Professor of Spanish, Lewis Institute, 

Chicago 111. 
Beaumarchais and Plautus: The Sources of Le Barbier de Seville. 

1905 George Fitch McKibben, Instructor in Seminario Theologico Bautista 

Mexicano, Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico. 
The Eructavit, an old French Poem: the Author's Environment, 
His Argument and Materials. 

1906 Milton Alexander Buchanan, Professor and Head of the Department 

of Italian and Spanish, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada. 
Comedia famosa del esclavo del demonio compnesta por el doctor Mira 
de Mesqiia (Barcelona, 1612). Edited with an Introduction and 
Notes. 
George Tyler Northup, Professor of Spanish Literature, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
El libro de los gatos: A Text with Introduction and Notes. 
1909 AuRELio Macedonio Espinosa, Professor of Spanish, Stanford Univer- 
sity, Stanford University, Cal. 
Studies in New Mexican Spanish, I. 
Ralph Emerson House, Professor of Spanish, State University of Iowa, 
Iowa City, Iowa. 
The Comedia radiana of Agustin Ortiz, with Introduction and Notes. 
1911 Henry Raymond Brush, Professor of French, University of CaUfornia, 
Southern Branch, Los Angeles, Cal. 
La Bataille de trente Anglois et de trente Bretons: Text with Intro- 
duction, Notes, and Glossary. 
Charles Frederick Ward, Associate Professor of Romance Languages, 
State University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
The Epistles on the Romance of the Rose and Other Documents in 
the Debate. 

fDeceased. 

37 



38 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1913 Henry Emil Haxo, Professor and Head of the Department of Romance 
Languages, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, N.D. 
Denis Piramus: La Vie Seint Edmunt, XII" siecle. 

1915 Earle Brownell Babcock, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Romance Languages and Literatures, New York University, 
New York, N.Y. 
A Critical Edition of the Vision of Christine de Pizan, Part III. 

1916 Agnes Rutherford Riddell, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Romance Languages, Wheaton College, Norton, Mass. 
Flaubert and Maupassant: A Literary Relationship. 

1917 Roy Temple House, Professor and Head of Department of Modern 

Languages, LTniversity of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla. 
L'Ordene de chevalerie: A Text with Introduction and Notes. 
Lander MacClintock, Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, 

Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind. 
Sainte-Beuve's Critical Theory and Practice after 1849. 

1919 Alexander Haggerty Krappe, Instructor in Romance Languages, 

Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind. 
Alliteration in the Chanson de Roland and in the Carmen de Proditione 

Guenonis. 
John Thomas Lister, Professor and Head of the Department of Spanish, 

Wooster College, Wooster, Ohio. 
Branch I of Perlesvaus, from MS. Hatton 82, Transcribed and Edited, 

with Notes. 

1920 Frederick A. G. Cowper, Professor of Romance Languages, Trinity 

College, Durham, N.C. 
Sources, Date, and Style of Ille et Galeron. 

Foster Erwin Guyer, Assistant Professor of French, Dartmouth College, 
Hanover, N.H. 
The Influence of Ovid on Crestien de Troyes. 
Ethel Preston, Instructor, University High School, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The History and Technique of the Reappearing Characters in the 
Comedie Humaine of Balzac. 

1921 Alois Richard Nykl, Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, 

Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. 
Transcriptions and Commentary upon Some Aljamiado Texts. , 
Clarence Edward Parmenter, Assistant Professor of Romance Lan- 
guages, LTniversity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The French Epistle in Verse from Deschamps to the year 1549. 

GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES 

1895 Francis Asbury Wood, Professor of Germanic Philology, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
I, Verner's Law in Gothic. II, The RedupUcating Verbs in Germanic. 

1897 Philip Schuyler Allen, Associate Professor of German Literature, 
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Wilhelm Miiller and the German Volkslied. 
Johannes Benoni Eduard Jonas, Teacher of German, DeWitt Clinton 
High School, New York City. 
The Poems of Heinrich Teichner. 

Jessie Louise Jones, Head of the Department of German, Lewis Institute, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Phonology of the Elis Saga. 



MODERN LANGUAGE GROUP 39 

1897 tPAUL OsKAR Kern. 

Das starke Verb bei Grimmelshausen. 

1899 Ora Philander Seward, Professor of Modern Languages, John B. 

Stetson University, DeLand, Fla. 
The Picturesque Negative in Middle High German. 

1900 Hermann Benjamin Almstedt, Professor of Germanic Languages and 

Literatures, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. 
Das mittelniederdeutsche Laiendoctrinal. 
Otto Heller, Professor of German, Washington University, St. Louis, 

Mo. 
Die Ahaswerussage in der Litteratur. 

1901 Max Batt, Teacher of English, John Marshall High School, Chicago, 111. 

The Treatment of Nature in German Literature from Guenther to 
the Appearance of Goethe's Werther. 
Carl Edgar Eggert, Teacher of Medieval History, John Marshall High 
School, Chicago, 111. 
The Middle Low German Version of the Legend of Mary Magdalen. 
Frederick Otto Schub, Private Tutor. 

Middle Low German Poems from Helmstedt Codices. 

1902 George A. Mxjlfinger, 6044 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. 

Ferdinand Kiirnberger's Roman Der Amerikamude, dessen Quellen 
und Verhaltnis zu Lenaus Amerikareise 

1903 Henrietta Katherine Becker (Mrs. Camillo von Klenze), 62 W. 102d 

St., New York City. 
Kleist and Hebbel : A Comparative Study. 

1905 Adolph Carl Noe, Assistant Professor of German Literature, University 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Das junge Deutschland und Goethe. 

1906 Charles Goetsch, Associate Professor of German, University of Chicago, 

Chicago, 111. 
Ablaut Relations in the Weak Verb in Gothic, Old High German, and 
Middle High German. 

1907 Chester Nathan Gould, Assistant Professor of German and Scandina- 

vian Literature, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Syntax of ana (an), at, and du (to) in Gothic and Old Saxon. 

1908 Hans Ernst Gronow, 110 Siid Strasse, Miinster (Westfalen), Germany. 

Anzengrubers Verhaltnis zum Naturalismus. 
Jacob Harold Heinzelmann, Professor of German, University of 
Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. 
The Influence of the German Volkslied upon Eichendorff's Lyrics. 
Marion Lee Taylor, Instructor in German in Public Schools, Brooklyn, 
N.Y. 
A Study of the Technique in Konrad Ferdinand Meyer's Novellen. 
Edward John Williamson, Professor of German, Hobart College, 
Geneva, N.Y. 
Grillparzer's Attitude toward Romanticism. 

1909 Leonard Bloomfield, Professor of Gerrnan and Comparative Philology, 

University of Ohio, Columbus, Ohio. 
A Semasiological Differentiation in Germanic Secondary Ablaut. 

fPETER A. ClAASSEN. 

Die Schicksalsfrage in Schiller's Dramen und dramatischen Entwtirfen. 
Samuel Kroesch, Assistant Professor of German, University of Minne- 
sota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Semasiological Development of Words for "Perceive, Under- 
stand, Think, Know" in the Older Germanic Dialects. 

t Deceased. 



40 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1909 Louise Malinckrodt Ktjeffner, Teacher of English, Hunter College 

(Evening Session), New York City. 
The Development of the Historic Drama: Its Theory and Practice. 
Walter Raleigh Myers, Assistant Professor of German, University of 
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Technique of Bridging Gaps in the Action of German Drama 
since Gottsched. Part I: Until the Death of Lessing. 

1910 Willis Arden Chamberlin, Professor of Modern Languages, Denison 

University, Granville, Ohio. 
Periodic and Loose Sentences in Schiller's Historical Works. 
Alfred Isaac Roehm, 2001 Peabody Place, Nashville, Tenn. 

Bibliographie und Kritik der deutschen tJbersetzungen aus der 

amerikanischen Dichtung. 

1911 Frank Adolph Bernstorff, Instructor in German, Northwestern 

University, Evanston, 111. 
The Use of the Word "derselbe" from the Classic Period of German 
Literature to the Present Day. 
George Pullen Jackson, Associate Professor of German, Vanderbilt 
University, Nashville, Tenn. 
From Young Lessing to Percy's Reliques. 
Armin Hajman Koller, Assistant Professor of German, L^niversity of 
Illinois, Urbana, 111. 
Herder's Conception of Milieu. 
William Ferdinand Ltjebke, Professor of English, University of Denver, 
Denver, Colo. 
The Language of Berthold von Chiemsee. 
Paul Herman Phillipson, Milwaukee, Wis. 
Aus Daniel von Binzers Leben. 

1912 Charles Boyle Campbell, Professor and Head of Modern Languages, 

Agricultural and Mechanical College, College Station, Tex. 
Concerning the Pronominal Antecedent and the Form of the 
Accompanying Relative Pronoun in Modern German Prose. 

1913 Milton D. Baumgartner, Assistant Professor of German, Butler College, 

Indianapolis, Ind. 
The Influence of Dryden on German Literature of the Eighteenth 
Century. 
Bertha Reed Coffman (Mrs. G. R.), Instructor, University College, 
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Influence of English Literature on Friedrich Hagedorn. 
Francis Waldemar Kracher, Advertising Manager, Brenard Mfg. Co., 
Iowa City, Iowa. 
Dramatische Mitleidsmittel im Modernen deutschen Drama. 
Henry Otto Schwabe, Nowata, Okla. 

The Semasiological Development of Words for "Eating" and 
"Drinking" in the Germanic Dialects. 
fMARiE Zimmerman. 

Eine Untersuchung des Wortgebrauchs in Goethe's Iphigenie als 
Grundlage einer neuen Literarhistoris.chen Erklarungsmethode. 

1914 tToRiLD Washington Arnoldson. 

Designations of Parts of the Body in Germanic Languages. 
RoscoE Myrl Ihrig, Supervisor of Night Courses and Summer Session, 
Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Semasiological Development of Germanic Words Meaning 
"Walk," "Run." 
Leon Metzinger, Professor of German, Agricultural College, Agricultural 
C9llege, N.D. 
Justinus Kerner and the German Volkslied. 
t Deceased. 



MODERN LANGUAGE GROUP 41 

1915 Oscar Carl Burkhard, Assistant Professor of German, University of 

Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
Die Exposition bei Schiller. 
Ella Elizabeth Ruebhausen, Professor of Modern Languages, Mount 
Morris College, Mount Morris, 111. 
A Study of the Technique in Heinrich Heine's Novelistic Prose. 
Hartie Emil Zabel, Deer Creek, Minn. 

The Semantic Development of Words for Mental Aberration in 
Germanic. 

1916 William Denny Baskett, Professor of Modern Languages, WilUam Jewell 

College, Liberty, Mo. 
An Investigation of the Words for the Body and Its Parts in Later 

Germanic. 
Alice Post Tabor, Instructor in German, University of CaUfornia, 

Berkeley, Cal. 
Goethe and the Revision of His Lyrics. 

1918 Joseph Emanuel Alexander Alexis, Associate Professor of Modern 

Languages, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. 
A Study of the Relative in Eighteenth-Century German Prose. 
Malcolm Howard Dewey, Professor of German, Emory University, 
Oxford, Ga. 
Herder's Relation to the Aesthetic Moveiuent of the Eighteenth 
Century. 
Lydia Elizabeth Frotscher, Assistant Professor of English, Sophie 
Newcomb College, New Orleans, La. 
Some Profane Elements in Mediaeval Religious Poetry. 

1919 Arthur Emanuel Wald, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Modern Languages, James Milhkin University, Decatur, 111. 
The Aesthetic Theories of the German Storm and Stress Movement. 
1921 Georgiana Rose Simpson, Professor of German and French, Dunbar 

High School, Washington, D.C. 
Herder's Conception of "Das Volk." 

ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE 

1894 Edwin Herbert Lewis, Professor of EngUsh and Dean of College Studies, 

Lewis Institute, Chicago, III. 
The History of the English Paragraph. 

1895 Frederic Ives Carpenter (formerly Professor of EngUsh, University of 

Chicago), 5533 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. 
Metaphor and Simile in the Minor EUzabethan Drama. 
Myra Reynolds, Professor of English, University of Chicago, Chicago, HI. 
The Treatment of Nature in English Poetry between Pope and 
Wordsworth. 
Oscar Lovell Triggs, 7706, 35th Ave., S.W., Seattle, Wash. 
The Assembly of Gods, by John Lydgate (Edition). 

1897 Mary Bowen (Mrs. W. H. Brainerd), Instructor in English, Wellesley 

College, Wellesley, Mass. 
The Influence of Petrarch upon the EUzabethan Sonnet. 
Alice Edwards Pratt (formerly Head of English Department, State 

Normal School, San Diego, Cal.), 2506 ColUer Ave., San Diego, Cal. 
The Use of Color in the Verse of the English Romantic Poets. 

1898 Eleanor Prescott Hammond, Lecturer in English, Wellesley College, 

Wellesley, Mass. 
Lydgate's Dance macabre. 

1899 Martha Edith Rickert, Writer, 1205 E. 60th St., Chicago, III. 

The Romance of Emare (Edition) . 



42 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1899 Malcolm William Wallace, Professor of English, University of Toronto, 
Toronto, Canada. 
The Influence of Plautus on the English Dramatic Literature of the 
Sixteenth Century. (Introduction to an edition of The Birth of 
Hercules.) 

1903 Okie Latham Hatcher, President, Southern Woman's Educational 

Alliance, Richmond, Va. 
John Fletcher: A Study in Dramatic Method. 
John Robertson Macarthur, Professor of English Literature, California 
Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Cal. 
The First Part of Sir John Oldcastle (Edition) . 
. George Linnaeus Marsh, Extension Associate Professor of English, 
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Sources and Analogues of The Flower and the Leaf. 

1904 Charles Henry Gray, Professor of EngUsh, Tufts College, Medford, 

Mass. 
Lodowick Carliell. 

1905 Reginald Harvey Griffith, Professor of Enghsh, University of Texas, 

Austin, Tex. 
Sir Perceval of Galles. 
George Fullmer Reynolds, Professor of English, University of Colo- 
rado, Boulder, Colo. 
Some Principles of EHzabethan Staging. 
George Coffin Taylor (formerly Assistant Professor of English, Uni- 
versity of Colorado, Boulder, Colo.), Columbia, S.C. 
Relations of Lyric and Drama in Medieval England. 

1906 Abbie Mary Lyon Sharman (Mrs. Henry Burton Sharman), 67 Queen's 

Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 
English Book-Reviewing Journals up to 1749. 

1907 James Finch Royster, Professor of English, University of North Carolina, 

Chapel Hill, N.C. 
A Middle English Treatise on the Ten Commandments (Edition). 

1909 Frank Clyde Brown, Professor and Head of the Department of English 

Literature, Trinity College, Durham, N.C. 
Elkanah Settle: His Life and Works. 
fDAviD Lee Maulsby. 

The contribution of Emerson to Literature. 

1910 jEdward Payson Morton. 

The Technique of EngHsh Non-Dramatic Blank Verse. 
Matthew Lyle Spencer, Director, School of JournaHsm, University of 
Washington, Seattle, Wash. 
Corpus Christi Pageants in England. 

1911 Charles Read Baskervill, Professor of English, University of Chicago, 

Chicago, 111. 
English Elements in Jonson's Early Comedy. 
Herbert Wynford Hill, Professor and Head of the Department of 
EngHsh, University of Nevada, Reno, Nev. 
La Calprenede's Romances and the Restoration Drama. 
Walter Kay Smart, Professor of EngUsh* Northwestern University 
School of Commerce, Chicago, 111. 
Some English and Latin Sources and Parallels for the Morality of 
Wisdom. 

1912 Thornton Shirley Graves, Professor of EngHsh, University of North 

CaroHna, Chapel Hill, N.C. 
The Court and the London Theatres during the Reign of Elizabeth. 

t Deceased 



MODERN LANGUAGE GROUP 43 

1912 Annette Brown Hopkins, Professor of English, Goucher College, 

Baltimore, Md. 
The Influence of Wace on the Romances of Crestien de Troies. 
James Root Hulbert, Associate Professor of Enghsh, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Chaucer's Official Life. 
Thomas Albert Knott, Associate Professor of English, State University 
of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
An Essay toward a Critical Text of the A- Version of Piers the Plow- 
man. 

Guy Andrew Thompson, Professor of English Literature, University of 
Maine, Orono, Me. 
Elizabethan Criticism of Poetry. 

1913 William Frank Bryan, Associate Professor of English, Northwestern 

LTniversity, Evanston, 111. 
Studies in the Dialects of the Kentish Charters of the Old English 
Period. 
George Raleigh Coffman, Professor of Enghsh, Grinnell College, 
Grinnell, Iowa. 
A New Theory Concerning the Origin of the Miracle Play. 
Carson Samuel Duncan, National Industrial Conference Board, 15 
Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 
The New Science and English Literature in the Classical Period. 

1914 Clyde Barnes Cooper, Associate Professor of English, Armour Institute 

of Technology, Chicago, 111. 
Some Ehzabethan Opinions of the Poetry and Character of Ovid. 
George Albert Nicholson (formerly Acting Head, Department of 
Rhetoric, De Pauw University, Greencastle, Ind.), Kusa, Okla. 
English Words with Native Roots and with Greek, Latin, or Romance 
Suffixes. 
Oscar Ludvig Olson, Professor of Enghsh and Acting President, Luther 
College, Decorah, Iowa. 
The Relation of the Hrolfs Saga Kraka and the Bjarkarimur to 
Beowulf: A Contribution to the History of Saga Development in 
England and the Scandinavian Countries. 
David Harrison Stevens, Assistant Professor of English, LTniversity of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Party Pohtics and English Journalism, 1702-1742. 

1915 Evelyn May Albright, Instructor in English, LTniversity of Chicago, 

Chicago, 111. 
A Study of Printing and Publishing Conditions in England, 1580-1640, 
with Especial Reference to Conservation of Author's Rights. 
Christopher Longest, Professor of Spanish, University of Mississippi, 
University, Miss. 
Spanish Sources of Southey. 
Martin Brown Ruud, Assistant Professor of English, University of 
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
An Essay toward a History of Shakespeare in Norway. 
George Wiley Sherburn, Assistant Professor of English, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Early Popularity of Milton's Minor Poems. 

1916 Lee Monroe Ellison, Professor and Head of the Department of English, 

College of Industrial Arts, Denton, Tex. 
The Early Romantic Drama at the English Court. 
1916 Dudley David Griffith, Associate Professor of English, Grinnell College, 

Grinnell, Iowa. 
The Griselda Story and Chaucer's Clerk's Tale. 



44 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1916 Laura Alandis Hibbard, Associate Professor of English Literature, 

Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass. 

The Non-Cyclic Romances of Mediaeval England: A Literary and 
Bibliographical Study. 
John Marcelltjs Steadman, Jr., Professor of English, Emory Uni- 
versity, Atlanta, Ga. 

The Origin of the Historical Present in English. 

1917 Helen Sard Hughes, Associate Professor of English, Wellesley College, 

Wellesley, Mass. 
The Life and Works of Mary Mitchell CoUyer. 
Elizabeth Willson, Instructor in English, University of Wisconsin, 

Madison, Wis. 
The Middle English Legends of Visits to the Other World, and Their 

Relation to the Metrical Romances. 

1918 Edgar Albert Hall, Professor of English, Adelphi College, Brooklyn, 

N.Y. 
Wilham Drury's Alvredus sive Alfredus. 

1919 Earl Broadus Fowler, Professor and Head of the Department of 

EngUsh, University of Louisville, Louisville, Ky. 
Spenser and the Courts of Love. 
Kemp Malonb, Assistant Professor of English, University of Minnesota, 

Minneapolis, Minn. 
Studies in English Phonology. 

1920 William Fenn De Moss, Professor of English, Nebraska Wesleyan 

University, University Place, Neb. 
The Influence of Aristotle's "Politics" and "Ethics" on Spenser. 
Emma Feild Pope, Instructor in Enghsh, University of Minnesota, 
Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Reflection of Renaissance Criticism in "The Faerie Queene." 
De Witt Talmage Starnes, Instructor in English, Rice Institute, 
Houston, Tex. 
A Bibliographical History of the Funeral Elegy in England, 1500-1638. 
William Flint Thrall, Assistant Professor of English, University of 
North CaroUna, Chapel Hill, N.C. 
The Legend of Snedgus and MacRiagla, Clerics of Colum Cille. 

1921 Lily Bess Campbell, 5757 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, 111. 

Scenes and Machines on the English Stage during the Renaissance: 
A Classical Revival. 
Baldwin Maxwell, Instructor in English, Rice Institute, Houston, Tex. 

Wily Beguiled. 
Lois Whitney, Instructor in English, University of Minnesota, 
Minneapolis, Minn. 
Studies in Eighteenth Century Primitivistic Theories of Epic Origins. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE GROUP 
MATHEMATICS 

1896 Leonard Eugene Dickson, Professor of Mathematics, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Analytic Representation of Substitutions on a Power of a Prime 
Number of Letters with a Discussion of the Linear Group. 

John Irwin Hutchinson, Professor of Mathematics, Cornell University, 
Ithaca, N.Y. _ 
On the Reduction of Hyperelliptic Functions (p = 2) to Elliptic 
Functions by a Transformation of the Second Degree. 

1898 Herbert Ellsworth Slaught, Professor of Mathematics, University 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Cross-Ratio Group of 120 Quadratic Cremona Transformations 
of the Plane. 

1899 John Anthony Miller, Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, 

Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa. 
Concerning Certain EUiptic Modular Functions of Square Rank. 

1900 Gilbert Ames Bliss, Professor of Mathematics, University of Chicago, 

Chicago, 111. 
The Geodesic Lines on the Anchor Ring. 

George Lincoln Brown, Professor of Mathematics, South Dakota 
Agricultural College, Brookings, S.D. 
A Ternary Linear Substitution Group of Order 3 . 360. 

William Gillespie, Professor of Mathematics, Princeton University, 
Princeton, N.J. 
On the Reduction of Hyperelliptic Integrals (p = 3) to Elliptic 
Integrals by Transformation of the Second and Third Degree. 

Derrick Norman Lehmer, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Uni- 
versity of California, Berkeley, Cal. 
Asymptotic Evaluation of Totient Sums. 

John Hector McDonald, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Uni- 
versity of California, Berkeley, Cal. 
On the System of a Binary Cubic and Quadratic and the Reduction 
of Hyperelliptic Integrals of Genus Two to Elliptic Integrals by- a 
Transformation of the Fourth Order. 
Ernest Brown Skinner, Professor of Mathematics, LTniversity of 
Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 
Ternary Monomial Substitution Groups of Finite Order with Deter- 
minant =*= 1. 

1901 William Findlay, Professor of Mathematics, McMaster University, 

Toronto, Ont. 
The Sylow Subgroups of the Symmetric Group. 

Thomas Milton Putnam, Professor of Mathematics and Dean of the 
Lower Division, University of California, Berkeley, Cal. 
The Quaternary Linear Homogeneous Group and the Ternary 
Linear Fractional Group. 
1903 Oswald Veblen, Professor of Mathematics, Princeton University, 
Princeton, N.J. 
A System of Axioms for Geometry, 

45 



46 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1904 William Henry Bussey, Professor and Chairman of Mathematics and 

Assistant Dean, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
Generational Relations for the Abstract Group Simply Isomorphic 

with the Group LF(2; p°). 
Herbert Edwin Jordan, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University 

of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. 
Group Characters of Various Linear Groups. 

Arthur Whipple Smith, Professor of Mathematics and Head of the 
Department, Colgate University, Hamilton, N.Y. 
Symbolic Treatment of Differential Geometry. 

1905 Thomas Emory McKinney, Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, 

University of South Dakota, Vermillion, S.D. 
Concerning a Certain Type of Continued Fractions Depending on 
a Variable Parameter. 
Robert Lee Moore, Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of 
Texas, Austin, Tex. 
Sets of Metrical Hypotheses for Geometry. 

1906 William Raymond Longley, Professor of Mathematics, Yale Uni- 

versity, New Haven, Conn. 
A Class of Periodic Orbits of an Infinitesimal Body Subject to the 
Attraction of n Finite Bodies. 
Arthur Ranum, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Cornell University, 
Ithaca, N.Y. 
The Group of Classes of Congruent Matrices with Application to 
the Group of Ismorphisms of Any Abelian Group. 
Anthony Lispenard Underbill, Associate Professor of Mathematics, 
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
Invariants under Point Transformations in the Calculus of Variations. 
Buzz M. Walker, Professor of Mathematics, Dean of School of Engineer- 
ing, Vice-President Mississippi Agricultural and Mechanical College, 
Agricultural College, Miss. 
On the Resolution of Higher Singularities of Algebraic Curves intc 
Ordinary Double Points. 

1907 George David Birkhoff, Professor of Mathematics, Harvard Uni- 

versity, Cambridge, Mass. 
Asymptotic Properties of Certain Ordinary Differential Equations, 
with Applications to Boundary Value and Expansion Problems. 
Robert Lacy Borger, Professor of Mathematics, Ohio University, 
Athens, Ohio. 
On the Determination of Ternary Linear Groups in the Galois Field 
of Order p^ 
Louis Ingold, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Missouri, 
Columbia, Mo. 
Vector Interpretation of Symbolic Parameters. 
Nels Johann Lennes, Professor of Mathematics and Head of the Depart- 
ment, University of Montana, Missoula, Mont. 
Curves in Non-metrical Analysis Situs with an Application in the 
Calculus of Variations. 
Frederick William Owens, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Cornell 
University, Ithaca, N.Y. 
The Introduction of Ideal Elements and Construction of Projective 
w-space in Terms of a Planar System of Points. 

Norman Richard Wilson, Professor of Mathematics, University of 
Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. 
Isoperimetrical Problems Which Are Reducible to Non-isoperimetrical 
Problems. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 47 



1908 Mary Emily Sinclair, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Oberlin 

College, Oberlin, Ohio. 
On a Compound Discontinuous Solution Connected with the Sur- 
face of Revolution of Minimum Area. 

1909 Thomas Buck, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Cali- 

fornia, Berkeley, Cal. 
Oscillating Satellites near the Lagrangian Equilateral Triangular 
Points. 
Arnold Dresden, Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of 
Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 
The Second Derivatives of the Extremal-Integral. 
Harris Franklin MacNeish, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 
College of the City of New York, New York City. 
Linear Polars of the fc-hedron in n-space. 

1910 Richard Philip Baker, Associate Professor of Mathematics, State Uni- 

versity of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
The Problem of the Angle-Bisectors. 
William Hunt Bates, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Purdue 
University, Lafayette, Ind. 
An Application of Symbolic Methods of the Treatment of Mean 
Curvatures in Hyper-Space. 
Theophil Henry Hildebrant, Associate Professor of Mathematics, 
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
A Contribution to the Foundations of Frechet's Calcul Fonctionnel. 
Egbert J. Miles, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Yale University, 
New Haven, Conn. 
The Absolute Minimum of a Definite Integral in a Special Field. 
Anna Johnson Pell, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Bryn Mawr 
College, Bryn Mawr, Pa. 
I. Biorthogonal Systems of Functions. II. Application to the 
Theory of Integral Equations. 
Arthur Dunn Pitcher, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Mathematics, Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. 
The Interrelation of Eight Fundamental Properties of Classes of 
Functions. 
Marion Ballantyne White, Associate Professor of Mathematics, and 
Dean of Women, Carleton College, Northfield, Minn. 
The Dependence of the Focal Point on Curvature in Space Problems 
of the Calculus of Variations. 

1911 Lloyd Lyne Dines, Professor of Mathematics, University of Saskatche- 

wan, Saskatoon, Canada. 
The Highest Common Factor of a System of Polynomials, with an 
Application to Implicit Functions. 
Theodore Lindquist, Professor and Head of the Department of Mathe- 
matics, State Normal School, Emporia, Kan. 
Mathematics for Freshman Students of Engineering. 
Ralph Eugene Root, Professor of Mathematics, Graduate School, U.S. 
Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. 
Iterated Limits in General Analysis. 
Albert Harris Wilson, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Haverford 
College, Haverford, Pa. 
The Canonical Types of Nets of Quadratic Forms in the Galois Field 
of Order p°. 

1912 Edward Wilson Chittenden, Associate Professor of Mathematics, 

State University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
Infinite Developments and the Composition Property (Ki2Bi)^, in 
General Analysis. 



48 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1912 Charles Albert Fischer, Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, 

Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. 
Some Contributions to the Theory of Functions of Lines. 
Charles Thompson Sullivan, Associate Professor of Mathematics, 

McGill University, Montreal, Canada. 
Properties of Surfaces Whose Asymptotic Lines Belong to Linear 

Complexes. 

1913 William Charles Krathwohl, Associate Professor of Mathematics, 

Armour Institute of Technology, Chicago, 111. 
Modular Invariants of Two Pairs of Cogredient Variables. 
Wilson Lee Miser, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Armour Insti- 
tute, Chicago, 111. 
On Linear Homogeneous Differential Equations with Elliptic Func- 
tion CoefKcients. 
fFRANK Marion Morrison. 

On the Relation between Some Important Notions of Projective and 
Metrical Differential Geometry. 
Elton James Moulton, Professor of Mathematics, Northwestern 
University, Evanston, 111. 
On Figures of Equilibrium of a Rotating Heterogeneous Fluid Body. 
fMiLDRED Leonora Sanderson. 

Formal Modular Invariants with an Application to Binary Modular 
Covariants. 

1914 Myer Grupp Gaba, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of 

Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. 
A Set of Postulates for General Projective Geometry of n Dimensions. 
Harold Reynolds Kingston, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Mathematics, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada. 
Metric Properties of Nets of Plane Curves. 
William Vernon Lovitt, Professor of Mathematics, Colorado College, 
Colorado Springs, Colo. 
A Type of Singular Points for a Transformation of Three Variables. 
Forbes Bagley Wiley, Professor of Mathematics, Denison University, 
Granville, Ohio. 
Proof of the Finiteness of Modular Covariants of a System of Binary 
Form of Cogredient Points. 

1915 Allen Fuller Carpenter, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Uni- 

versity of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 
Ruled Surfaces Whose Flecnode Curves Have Plane Branches. 
Charles Ross Dines, Federal Reserve Bank, Chicago, 111. 

Functions of Positive Type and Selected Topics in General Analysis. 
Jasper Ole Hassler, Associate Professor of Mathematics, University 
of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla. 
Plane Nets Periodic of Period Three under the Laplace Transfor- 
mation. 
Olive Clio Haz^ett, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Mount Holyoke 
College, South Hadley, Mass. 
On the Classification and Invariantive Characterizations of Nilpotent 
Algebras. 
Archibald Henderson, Professor of Mathematics, University of North 
Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 
The Twenty-seven Lines upon the Cubic Surface. 
Alfred Lewis Nelson, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University 
of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
Plane Nets with Equal Laplace-Darboux Invariants. 

t Deceased. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 49 

1915 Vincent Collins Poor, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of 

Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
A Certain Type of Exact Solution of the Equations of Motion of a 

Viscous Liquid. 
Samuel Watson Reaves, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Mathematics, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla. 
Metric Properties of Flecnodes on Ruled Surfaces. 

Mary Evelyn Wells, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Vassar 
College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 
The Determination of All Inequalities of Certain Types in General 
Linear Integral Equation Theory. 

Chester Henry Yeaton, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Oberlin 
College, Oberlin, Ohio. 
Surfaces Characterized by Certain Properties of Their Directrix 
Congruences. 

1916 Elmer Daniel Grant, Professor of Mathematics, Earlham College, 

Richmond, Ind. 
The Motion of a Flexible Cable in a Vertical Plane. 

Arthur McCracken Harding, Professor of Mathematics and Director 
of General Extension, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. 
On Certain Loci Projectively Connected with a Given Plane Curve. 

William Leroy Hart, Associate Professor of Mathematics, University 
of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
Differential Equations and Implicit Functions in Infinitely Many 
Variables. 
Gillie Aldah Larew, Professor of Mathematics, Randolph-Macon 
Woman's College, Lynchburg, Va. 
Necessary Conditions for the Problem of Mayer in the Calculus of 
Variations. 
Arthur Shepard Merrill, Associate Professor of Mathematics, L^ni- 
versity of Montana, Missoula, Mont. 
An Isoperimetric Problem with Variable End-Points. 
Arthur Richard Schweitzer, Chicago, 111. 

Les Idees directrices de la logique genetique des mathematiques. 
David Melville Smith, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Georgia 
School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. 
Jacobi's Condition for the Problem of Lagrange in the Calculus of 
Variations. 
Pauline Sperry, Instructor in Mathematics, University of California, 
Berkeley, Cal. 
Properties of a Certain Projectively Defined Two-Parameter Family 
of Curves on a General Surface. 

1917 Jacob Millison Kinney, Instructor in Mathematics, Crane Junior 

College, Chicago, 111. 
The General Theory of Congruences without Any Preliminary 
Integration. 
Kenneth Worcester Lamson, Instructor in Mathematics, Columbia 
University, New York, N.Y. 
A General Implicit Function Theorem, with an Application to 
Problems of Relative Minimum. 
Flora Elizabeth Le Stourgeon, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 

University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky. 
tJAMES Elijah McAtee. 

Modular Invariants of a Quadratic Form for a Prime Power Modulus. 

t Deceased. 



50 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1917 William Pinkerton Ott, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Vander- 

bilt University, Nashville, Tenn. 
The General Problem of the Type of the Brachistochrone with 
Variable End-Points. 
Levi Stephen Shively, Professor of Mathematics and Acting President, 
Mount Morris College, Mount Morris, 111. 
A New Basis for the Metric Theory of Congruences. 

Thomas McNider Simpson, Jr., Professor of Mathematics, Randolph- 
Macon College, Ashland, Va. 
Relation between the Metric and Projective Theories of Space 
Curves. 

1918 Israel Albert Barnett, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University 

of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada. 
Differential Equations with a Continuous Infinitude of Variables. 

George Hoffman Cresse, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Uni- 
versity of Arizona, Tuczon, Ariz. 
On the Class Numbers of Binary Quadratic Forms. 

Ernest Preston Lane, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of 
Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 
Conjugate Systems with Indeterminate Axis Curves. 

Webster Godman Simon, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Western 
Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. 
On the Solution of Certain Types of Linear Differential Equations in 
Infinitely many variables. 

1919 Cyril Arthur Nelson, Associate in Mathematics, Johns Hopkins 

University, Baltimore, Md. 
Conjugate Systems with Conjugate Axis Curves. 

1920 Gladys Elizabeth Carson Gibbens, Instructor in Mathematics, Uni- 

versity of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
Comparison of Different Line Geometric Representations for Func- 
tions of a Complex Variable. 

John Wayne Lasley, Jr., Associate Professor of Mathematics, University 
of North CaroUna, Chapel Hill, N.C. 
Some Special Cases of the Flecnode Transformations of Ruled 
Surfaces. 

Irwin Roman, Instructor in Mathematics, Northwestern University, 
Evanston, 111. 
The Transformation of Waves through a Symmetrical Optical 
Instrument. 

William Lloyd Garrison Williams, Instructor in Mathematics, Cornell 
University, Ithaca, N.Y. 
Fundamental System of Formal Modular Simi-Invariants of the 
Binary Cubic. 

Frank Edwin Wood, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, North- 
western University, Evanston, 111. 
On Certain Relations between the Projective Theory of Surfaces 
and the Projective Theory of Congruences. 

1921 Edward Hegeler Carus, President of the Carus Chemical Company, 

LaSalle, 111. 
Invariants as Products: A Vector Interpretation of the SymboUc 
Method. 

Claribel Kendall, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of 
Colorado, Boulder, Colo. 
Certain Congruences Determined by a given Surface. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 51 

1921 Mayme Irwin Logsdon, Instructor in Mathematics, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Equivalents and Reduction of Pairs of Hermitian Forms. 

Cyrus Colton MacDuffee, Instructor in Mathematics, Princeton 
University, Princeton, N.J. 
Invariantive Characterizations of Linear Algebras with the Associa-, 
tive Law Not Assumed. 

MATHEMATICAL ASTRONOMY 

1900 Forest Ray Moulton, Professor of Astronomy, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
Periodic Oscillating Satellites. 

1903 William Albert Hamilton, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Mathematics, Beloit College, Beloit, Wis. 
The True Radii of Convergence for Expansions as Power Series in 
the Time, in the Case of Parabolic Motion. 

1904 Arthur Constant Lunn, Associate Professor of Applied Mathematics, 

University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Differential Equations of Dynamics. 

1905 Delonzo Tate Wilson, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Case School 

of Applied Science, Cleveland, Ohio. 
Work on Minor Planets. 

1906 Frank Loxley Griffin, Professor of Mathematics, Reed College, 

Portland, Ore. 
^ Certain Periodic Orbits of k Finite Bodies Revolving about a Rela- 

tively Large Central Mass. 

1908 William Duncan MacMillan, Associate Professor of Astronomy, Uni- 

versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Periodic Orbits about an Oblate Spheroid. 

1909 Herbert Earle Buchanan, Professor of Mathematics, Tulane Uni- 

versity, New Orleans, La. 
Periodic Oscillations of Three Finite Masses about the Langrangian 
Circular Solutions. 
1911 Daniel Buchanan, Professor of Mathematics, University of British 
Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. 
A Class of Periodic Solutions of the Problem of Three Bodies, Two of 
Equal Mass, the Third Moving on a Straight Line. 
1913 Lloyd Arthur Heber Warren, Professor of Mathematics, University 
of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. 
A Class of Asymptotic Orbits in the Problem of Three Bodies. 
1915 John William Campbell, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Uni- 
versity of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta. 
Periodic Solution of the Problem of Three Bodies in Three Dimen- 
sions. 
Louis Allen Hopkins, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University 
of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
On the Theory of the Motion of the Small Planets with a Periodic 
Orbit for the Hilda Type. 

PRACTICAL ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS 

1913 Curvin Henry Gingrich, Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, 
Carleton College, Northfield, Minn. 
A Determination of the Photographic Magnitudes of Comparison 
Stars in Certain Hagen Fields. 



52 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1913 Oliver Justin Lee, Instructor in Practical Astronomy, Yerkes Observa- 

tory, Williams Bay, Wis. 
The Spectroscopic System 9 Camelopardalis. 

1914 Frank Craig Jordan, Professor of Astronomy, University of Pittsburgh, 

Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Color-Changes of Certain Variable Stars of Short Periods. 

1915 Harlan True Stetson, Assistant Professor of Astronomy, Harvard 

University, Cambridge, Mass. 
On the Apparatus and on Methods for Thermo-electric Measure- 
ments in Photographic Photometry, with Application to the 
Determination of Magnitude, Spectral Intensities, and the Light 
Curves of Variable Stars. 
1917 Edwin Powell Hubble, Astronomer, Mount Wilson Observatory, 
Pasadena, Cal. 
Photographic Investigations of Faint Nebulae. 

1919 Hannah Steele Pettit, Pasadena, Cal. 

The Proper Motions and Parallaxes of 359 Stars in the Cluster h Persei, 
Derived from Photographs Made with the 40-Inch Refractor of 
the Yerkes Observatory. 

1920 Alice Hall Farnsworth, Instructor in Astronomy, Mount Holyoke 

College, South Hadley, Mass. 
Comparison of the Photometric Fields of the 6-Inch Doublet, 24-Inch 
Reflector, and 40-Inch Refractor with Some Investigation of the 
Astrometric Field of the Reflector. 
Edison Pettit, Assistant, Mount Wilson Observatory, Pasadena, Cal. 
The Form and Motions of the Solar Prominences. 

1921 Harriet McWilliams Parsons, Assistant Professor of Astronomy, 

Smith College, Northampton, Mass. 
Astrometric and Photometric Statistics of Certain of Hagen's Fields 
Photographed with the Two-Foot Reflector of the Yerkes Observa- 
tory. 

PHYSICS 

1897 Gordon Ferry Hull, Professor of Physics, Dartmouth College, Hanover, 

N.H.; Major in Ordnance, U.S.A. 
On the Use of the Interferometer in the Study of Electric Waves. 
Isabelle Stone, Principal, American School for Girls, Rome, Italy. 
On the Electrical Resistance of Thin Films. 

1898 Edwin Sheldon Johonnott, Professor of Physics, Rose Polytechnic 

Institute, Terre Haute, Ind. 
Thickness of the Black Spot in Liquid Films. 

1899 Henry Gordon Gale, Professor of Physics, University of Chicago, 

Chicago, 111. 
On the Relation between Density and Index of Refraction of Air. 

1900 Robert Francis Earhart, Professor of Physics, Ohio State University, 

Columbus, Ohio. 
The SparkHng Potentials between Plates at Small Distances. 

1901 Fritz Reichmajstn, Practical Physicist, Troy, N.Y. 

The Capacities of Air Condensers for Very Small Distances between 
the Plates. 

1902 Frank Baldwin Jewett, Vice-President and Chief Engineer, Western 

Electric Co., New York, N.Y. 
A New Method of Determining the Vapor-Density of Metallic Vapors. 
1904 Thomas Eaton Doubt, Professor of Physics, Armour Institute of Tech- 
nology, Chicago, 111. 
The Effect of Intensity upon the Velocity of Light. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 53 

1904 Fannie Cornelia Frisbie (Mrs. Frank B. Jewett), Short Hills, N.J. 

The Effects of Pressure on Magnetic Induction. 

Thomas Carlyle Hebb, Professor of Physics, University of British 
Columbia, Vancouver, Canada. 
The Velocity of Sound. 

1905 Frederic Lendhall Bishop, Professor of Physics, University of Pitts- 

burgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Thermal Conductivity of Lead. 

Glenn Moody Hobbs, Director of Technical Laboratories, Sears Roebuck 
& Co., Chicago, 111. 
The Relation between P.D. and Spark-Length for Small Values of 
the Latter. 

Carleton John Lynde, Professor of Physics, MacDonald College, 
Quebec, Canada. 
The Effect of Pressure on Surface Tension. 

1906 William Richards Blair, Major, Signal Corps, U.S. Army, in charge 

Meteorological Division, Washington, D.C. 
The Change of Phase Due to the Passage of Electric Waves through 
Thin Films. 
Lawrence Emery Gurney, Professor of Physics, University of the 
Philippines, Manila, P.I. 
The Viscosity of Water at Low Rate of Shear. 

1907 Oliver Charles Clifford, Professor of Electrical Engineering, Armour 

Institute of Technology, Chicago, 111. 
SusceptibiUty of Copper and Tin and Their Alloys. 

George Winchester, Professor of Physics, Rutgers College, New 
Brunswick, N.J. 
Discharge of Electricity from Metals under the Influence of Ultra- 
Violet Light. 

1909 William Ross Ham, Professor of Physics, Pennsylvania State College, 

State College, Pa. 
The Polarization of Primary X-Rays. 

Charles Albert Proctor, Professor of Physics, Dartmouth College, 
Hanover, N.H. 

The Variation of - with Speed in the Case of Cathode Rays. 

Newland Farnsworth Smith, Professor and Head of Physics, MiUtary 
College of South Carolina, The Citadel, Charleston, S.C. 
Effect of Tension on Thermal and Electrical Conductivity. 

1910 Louis Begeman, Professor of Physics, Iowa State Teachers College, 

Cedar Falls, Iowa. 
The Determination of "e" by the Cloud Method. 

J. Harry Clo, Professor and Head of the Department of Physics, Uni- 
versity of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Effect of Temperature upon the Ionization of Gas. 
Ansel Alphonso Knowlton, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Physics, Reed College, Portland, Ore. 
Preparation and Testing of Heusler Alloys. 
John Mathias Kuehne, Professor of Physics, University of Te.\as, 
Austin, Tex. 
The Electrostatic Effect of a Changing Magnetic Field. 
James Remus Wright, Head of Engine Research Laboratory, Standard 
Oil Co., Elizabeth, N.J. 
Photo-electric Effects of Aluminum as a Function of the Wave- 
Length of the Incident Light. 



54 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1911 Harold De Forest Arnold, Head of Research Laboratory, Western 
Electric Co., New York, N.Y. 
Limitations Imposed by Slip and Inertia Terms upon Stokes Law 
for the Motion of Spheres through Liquids. 
fEowiN Sherwood Bishop. 

A Determination of the Minimum Ionizing Kinetic Energy of an 
Electron in a Gas. 
Harvey Fletcher, Research Laboratory, Western Electric Co., New 
York, N.Y. 
A Verification of the Theory of Brownian Movements and a Direct 
Determination of the Value of "Ne" for Gaseous Ionization. 
Harvey Brace Lemon, Associate Professor of Physics, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Influence of Teinperature upon the Intensities of the Lines of 
the Hydrogen Spectrum. 
Howard Wilson Moody, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Physics, Mississippi Agricultural College, Agricultural College, Miss. 
A Determination of the Ratio of the Specific Heats and the Specific 
Heat at Constant Pressure of Air and Carbon Dioxide. 

1913 Lachlan Gilchrist, Assistant Professor of Physics, University of Toronto, 

Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 
An Absolute Determination of the Viscosity of Air. 
Edward James Moore, Professor and Head of the Department of Physics, 

University of Buffalo, Buffalo, N.Y. 
Reaction Effects Produced by the Discharge of Electricity from Points 

in Gases and the Bearing of These Effects on the Theory of the 

Small Ion. 

1914 Albert Edward Hennings, Associate Professor of Physics, University 

of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. 
A Study of the Contact Potentials and Photo-electric Properties 
of Metals in Vacuo. 
Verne Frank Swaim, Professor of Physics, Bradley Polytechnic Insti- 
tute, Peoria, 111. 
The Pressure-Shift of Lines in the Spectrum of Zinc. 

1915 William Henry Kadesch, Professor of Physics, Iowa State Teachers' 

College, Cedar Falls, Iowa. 
The Energy of Photo-Electrons from Sodium and Potassium as a 
Function of the Frequency of the Incident Light. 
John Yiu-bong Lee, Head of Lecture Department, Y.M.C.A. in China, 
20 Museum Road, Shanghai, China. 
The Determination of "e" by the Millikan Method Using Solid 
Spheres. 
Isaiah March Rapp, Professor of Physics, University of Montana, 
Missoula, Mont. 
The Flow of Air through Capillary Tubes. 
Oscar William Silvey, Professor of Physics, Texas Agricultural and 
Mechanical College, College Station, Tex. 
A Comparison of the Fall of a Droplet in a Liquid and in a Gas. 

1916 Arthur Jeffery Dempster, Assistant Professor of Physics, University 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Properties of Slow Canal Rays. 
Ertle Leslie Harrington, Professor of Physics, University of Saskat- 
chewan, Saskatoon, Canada. 
A Redetermination of the Absolute Value of the Coefficient of 
Viscosity of Air. 

t Deceased. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 55 

1916 YosHio IsHiDA, Physicist, Imperial Institute, Tokyo, Japan. 

The Kinetic Theory of Rigid Molecules. 

Leonard B. Loeb, National Research Fellow in Physics, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Mobihty of Gaseous Ions in High Electric Fields. 

Carl Danforth Miller, Assistant Professor of Physics, University of 
Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. 
Absorption Coefficients of Soft X-Rays. 

Benjamin Estill Shackelford, Physicist, The Westinghouse Co., New- 
York, N.Y. 
Temperature and Blackening Effects in Hehcal Tungsten Filaments. 
William Henry Souder, Physicist, Bureau of Standards, Washington, 

The Normal Photo-electric Effect of Lithium, Sodium, and Potassium 
as a Function of Wave-Lengths and Incidental Energy. 

Walter Ticknor Whitney, Assistant Professor of Physics, California 
Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Cal. 
The Pole Effect in a Calcium Arc. 

1917 Karl Kelchner Darrow, Research Phvsicist, Western Electric Co., 

New York, N.Y. 
Preliminary Report on a New Method for Determining the Velocity 

of Sound in Gases. 
Victor Hugo Gottschalk, Research Engineer, % Society of Automotive 

Engineers, New York City. 
The Nature of the Process of Ionization by Alpha Rays. 

Leopold Joseph Lassalle, Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Uni- 
versity of Louisiana, Baton Rouge, La. 
The Law of Fall of a Sphere through Carbon Dioxide and an Exact 
Determination of the Viscosity of That Gas. 
Margaret Calderwood Shields, Associate Professor of Physics, 
Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass. 
A Determination of the Ratio of the Specific Heats of Hydrogen at 
18 Degrees and —190 Degrees. 
1919 John Bewley Derieux, Professor of Physics, North Carolina State 
College, Raleigh, N.C. 

I. The Use of Mercury Droplets in Millikan's Experiment. 

II. Photo-Electric Effects on Mercury Droplets. 

Charles Frederick Hagenow, Associate Professor of Physics, Wash- 
ington University, St. Louis, Mo. 
Thermionic and Photoelectric Phenomena at the Lowest Attainable 
Pressures. 
Mervin Joe Kelly, Research Physicist, Western Electric Research 
Laboratory, New York, N.Y. 
The Valency of Photo-Electrons and the Photo-electric Properties of 
Some Insulators. 
Harold W. Nichols, Research Engineer, Western Electric Research 
Laboratory, New York, N.Y. 
Theory of Variable Dynamical-Electrical Systems. 
Ralph Alanson Sawyer, Assistant Professor of Physics, L'niversity of 
Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
Metallic Spark Spectra in the Extreme Ultra-Violet. 
Leland Johnson Stacy, Telephone Development Engineer, Western 
Electric Co., New York, N.Y. 
A Determination by the Constant-Deflection Method of the Value of 
the Coefficient of Slip for Rough and for Smooth Surfaces in Air. 



56 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1920 Ira Garnett Barber, Research Physicist, Linde Air Products Co., 

Buffalo, N.Y. 
Secondary Electron Emission from Copper Surfaces. 

Oswald Blackwood, Assistant Professor of Physics, University of 
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
On the Existence of Homogeneous Groups of Large Ions. 

Otto Koppius, Assistant Professor of Physics, Oberlin College, OberUn, 
Ohio. 
A Comparison of the Thermionic and Photoelectric Work-Functions 
in Platinum. 
Harold Horton Sheldon, Assistant Professor of Physics, Washington 
Square College, New York City. 
Charcoal Activation. 

1921 William Kunerth, Associate Professor of Physics, Iowa State College 

of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts, Ames, Iowa. 
The SolubiUty of CO^ and N^O in Certain Solvents, 

LouALLEN Fredrick Miller, Assistant Professor of Physics, University 
of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
Pressure Shifts in a Calcium Arc. 

John Preston Minton, National Research Fellow in Physics, University 
of Chicago, Chicago, III. 
Sensitivity of Normal and Defective Ears for Tones of Various 
Frequencies. 
William Ralph Smythe, Assistant Professor of Physics, University of 
the Philippines, Manila, P.I. 
The Spectrum of Fluorine. 
Karl Skillman VanDyke, Assistant Professor of Physics, Wesleyan 
University, Middletown, Conn. 
A Determination of the Coefficients of Viscosity and of Slip for 
Carbondioxide and Air by the Constant-Deflection Method. 

Hugo Bernard Wahlin, Instructor in Physics, University of Wisconsin, 
Madison, Wis. 
Behavior of Free Electrons toward Gas Molecules. 

Thomas Russell Wilkins, Professor of Physics, Brandon College, 
Brandon, Manitoba, Canada. 
Multiple Valency in the Ionization by Alpha Rays. 

CHEMISTRY 

1894 Adolph Bernhard, Professor of Chemistry, State Normal School, La 
Crosse, Wis. 
Ueber die Einfiihrung von Acylen in den Benzoylessigaether. 
Warren Rufus Smith, Professor and Head of the Department of Chemis- 
try, Lewis Institute, Chicago, 111. 
On the Addition Products of the Aromatic Isocyanides. 

1896 Bernard Conrad Hesse, Consulting Chemist, General Chemical Co., 

New York City. 
On Malonic Nitrile and Some of Its Derivatives. 
Samuel Ellis Swartz, Professor of Chemistry and Physics, Fairmount 

College, Wichita, Kan. 
The Action of Sodium Ethylate on Amide Bromides. 

1897 James Bert Garner, Professor and Head of the Department of Chemical 

Engineering, ITniversity of Pittsburgh, and Director of Research, 
Hope Natural Gas Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. 
Condensations with Benzoin by Means of Sodium Ethylate. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 57 

1897 Lauder William Jones, Research Professor of Organic Chemistry, 

Princeton University, Princeton, N.J. 
On Salts of Nitroparaffine and Acylated Derivatives of Hydroxyl- 
amine. 

1898 Frank Burnett Dains, Professor of Chemistry, University of Kansas, 

Lawrence, Kan. 
On the Isourea Ethers and Other Derivatives of Ureas. 

Otto Folin, Hamilton Kuhn Professor of Biological Chemistry, Harvard 
Medical School, Boston, Mass. 
On Urethanes. 

Elizabeth Jeffreys, Professor of Chemistry, Pritchett College, Glas- 
gow, Mo. 
On Undecylamine and Pentadecylamine and the Preparation of the 
Higher Amines of the Aliphatic Series. 

Herbert Newby McCoy, Vice-President, Linsay Light Co., Chicago, 111. 
On the Hydrochlorides of Carbo-phenyhmido Derivatives. 

1899 John Charles Hessler, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Chemistry, Knox College, Galesburg, 111. 
On Alkyl Malonic Nitriles and Their Derivatives. 

William McPherson, Professor and Head of the Department of Chemis- 
try and Dean of the Graduate School, Ohio State University, 
Columbus, Ohio. 
On the Nature of the Oxyazo Compounds. 

James Harvey Ransom, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Chemistry, James Millikin LTniversity, Decatur, 111. 
On the Molecular Rearrangement of o-Aminophenyl Ethyl Carbonate 
to o-Oxyphenylurethane. 

1900 Henry Chalmbers Biddle, Chemist, Berkeley, Cal. 

Ueber Derivate des Isuretins, der Formhydroxamsaure und ihre 
Beziehungen zur Knallsaure. 

1901 Ralph Harper McKee, Professor of Chemical Engineering, Columbia 

University, New York, N.Y., and Director of Research Laboratory, 
Tennessee Copper Co., Ridgewood, N.J. 
On the Oxygen Ethers of the Ureas: Methyl- and Ethylisourea. 

1902 Solomon Farley Agree, Research Chemist, National Wood Chemical 

Association, Syracuse, N.Y. 
On Sodium Phenyl and the Action of Sodium on Ketones. 

Wallace Appleton Beatty, Research Chemist, Beechnut Packing Co., 
Brooklyn, N.Y. 
The Action of Carbon Monoxide on Sodium Alcoholates Alone and 
in the Presence of Salts of Fatty Acids. 
Eugene Paul Schoch, Professor and Chairman of the School of Chem- 
istry and Chairman of the School of Chemical Engineering, Uni- 
versity of Texas, Austin, Tex. 
The Red and the Yellow Mercuric Oxides and the Mercuric Oxy- 
chlorides. 
Edwin Emery Slosson, Editor, Scientific News Service, Washington, D.C. 
On Acylhalogenamine Derivatives and the Beckmann Rearrangement. 

1903 Henry Tabor Upson, Pre.sident and Treasurer, Pease Oil Co., 

Buffalo, N.Y. 
The Molecular Rearrangement of Aminophenylalkyl Carbonates. • 

1904 Maxwell Adams, Professor of Chemistry, University of Nevada, 

Reno, Nev. 
On Some Hydroxylamine Compounds. 



58 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1904 Raymond Foss Bacon, Consulting Chemist, New York, N.Y. 

On the Reactions of Sodium Benzhydrol. 
William McAfee Bruce, Brinkley, Ark. 

On the Oxygen Ethers of Urea. 
Nellie Esther Goldthwaite, Associate Professor of Home Economics, 
Colorado State Agricultural College, Fort Collins, Colo. 
On Substituted Benxhydrol Derivatives and Bromcyanacetic Ether. 
OswiN W. Willcox, Chief Chemist and Superintendent, Aetna Explo- 
sives Co., Mount Union, Pa. 
On the Reactions of Ethyl Chlorsulphonate. 

1905 William Lloyd Evans, Professor of Chemistry, Ohio State University, 

Columbus, Ohio. 
On the Behavior of Benzoyl Carbinol toward Alkalies and Oxidizing 

Agents. 
William McCracken, Professor of Chemistry, State Normal School, 

Kalamazoo, Mich. 
Studies in Catalysis. V. The Catalysis of Imidoesters. 

Hermann Irving Schlesinger, Professor of Chemistry, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Studies in Catalysis. VI. The Catalysis of Imidoesters. 

1906 Roy Hutchinson Brownlee, President, Brownlee Laboratory, Pitts- 

burgh, Pa. 
On Precipitated Sulphur. 

Charles M. Carson, Professor and Head of the Department of Chemis- 
try, Houghton School of Mines, Houghton, Mich. 
On Amorphous Sulphur: Further Study of the Two Forms of Liquid 
Sulphur as Dynamic Isomers. 
Henry Max Goettsch, Assistant Professor of Technical Chemistry, 
University of Cincinnati," Cincinati, Ohio. 
The Absorption Coefficients of Uranium Compounds. 
Willis Stose Hilpert, Vice-President, The Miner Laboratories, Chi- 
cago, 111. 
Stereoisomeric Chlorimido Acid Esters. 
James Wright Lawrie, Research Chemist, E. I. du Pont de Nemours 
and Co., Wilmington, Del. 
The Chemistry of the Acetylidene Compounds. 
Andrew Fridley McLeod, Professor of Physical Chemistry, William 
and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va. 
On Aldol, Pentaerythrose, and the Action of Copper Acetate on the 
Hexoses. 

1907 fEoiTH Ethel Barnard. 

The Catalysis of Imidoesters as Affected by the Presence of Non- 
Electrolytes and Electrolytes. 
Katharine Blunt, Associate Professor of Food Chemistry and Chairman 
of the Department of Home Economics, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Formation of Amidines. 
WiLLEY Denis, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Tulane University, 
New Orleans, La. 
On the Behavior of Various Aldehydes, Ketones, and Alcohols toward 
Oxidizing Agents. 
Robert Anderson Hall, Research Chemist, Colgate and Co., New 
York, N.Y. 
The Action of Ammonia on Isourea Esters. 

t Deceased. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 59 

1907 Louis Allen Higley, Professor of Chemistry, New Mexico College of 

Agriculture and Mechanical Arts, State College, N.M. 
On the Behavior of Sodium and Sodium Alcoholates toward Various 

Esters. 

William Horace Ross, Research Chemist, Bureau of Soils, Department 
of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 
On the Relation between the Radioactivity and the Composition 
of Thorium and Uranium Minerals. 

Louis A. Test, Professor of General Chemistry, Purdue University, 
Lafayette, Ind. 
The Rearrangement of o-Amino-Phenyl Esters. 

1908 George Cromwell Ashman, Professor of Chemistry, Bradley Institute! 

Peoria, 111. 
Studies in Radioactivity. 

1909 Ernest Anderson, Professor of Chemistry, University of Nebraska, 

Lincoln, Neb. 
The Action of Fehling's Solution on d-Galactose. 

William Weldon Hickman, Professor of Chemistry, Assuit College, 
Assuit, Egypt. 
The Catalysis of Imidoesters. 

Winford Lee Lewis, Professor and Head of the Department of Chem- 
istry, Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. 
On the Action of Fehling's Solution on Malt Sugar. 

Peter Po^v^ell Peterson, Ranch Owner, Idaho Falls, Idaho. 
Stereoisomerism of Chlorimido-Ketones. 

Lemuel Charles Raiford, Professor of Chemistry, University of Iowa, 
Iowa City, Iowa. 
Chlorimido Quinones. 

Herman Augustus Spoehr, Chemist, Carnegie Institution, Carmel, Cal. 
The Behavior of the Ordinary Hexoses toward Hydrogen Peroxide 
in the Presence of Alkaline Hydroxides as Well as of Various 
Iron Salts. 

1910 Emma Perry Carr, Professor and Head of the Department of Chemistry, 

Mount Holyoke College, Mount Holyoke, Mass. 
The Aliphatic Imidoesters. 
Elbert Edwin Chandler, Professor of Chemistry, Occidental College, 
Los Angeles, Cal. 
Ionization Constants of the Second Hydrogen Ion of Dibasic Acids. 

Ira Harris Derby, Consulting Chemist, Republic Creosoting Co., 
Indianapolis, Ind. 
Studies in Catalysis of Imidoesters, IV. 

Stewart Joseph Lloyd, Professor and Head of the Department of Chem- 
istry and Metallurgy, University of Alabama, University, Ala. 
Studies in Radioactivity. 

Alan W. C. Menzies, Professor of Chemistry, Princeton University, 
Princeton, N.J. 
Studies in Vapor-Pressure. 

John Colin Moore, Instructor in Chemistry, Crane Junior College, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Action of Water on Acyl Isoureas. 
. William Cabler Moore, Research Chemist, U.S. Industrial Alcohol 
Co., Baltimore, Md. 
Studies in Organic Amalgams. 



60 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1910 Fred Wilbert Upson, Professor and Head of the Department of Chem- 

istry, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. 
On the Action of Normal Barium Hydroxide on d. Glucose and d. 
Galactose. 

1911 Thomas Bruce Freas, Professor of Chemistry, Columbia University, 

New York, N.Y. 
A Study of Thermostats. 

John Foote Norton, Associate Professor of Bacteriology, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Simultaneous Reactions in Amidine Formation. 

Harlan Leo Trumbull, Research Chemist, Goodrich Co., Akron, Ohio. 
The Molecular Rearrangement of Acid Chloramides and the Ioniza- 
tion of Their Salts. 

Leroy Samuel Weatherby, Professor of Chemistry, University of 
Southern California, Los Angeles, Cal. 
The Salt-Effects of the Nitrates and Sulphonates in the Catalysis 
of Imidoesters. 

Franklin Lorenzo West, Director, School of General Science, Professor 
of Physics, Utah Agricultural College, and Physicist, Utah Experi- 
ment Station, Logan, Utah. 
The Physical and Chemical Properties of Organic Amalgams. 

1912 Paul David Potter, Chief Chemist, Sprague, Warner & Co., Chicago, 111. 

The Hydrates of Arsenic Pentoxide. 

Charles Herman Viol, Director, Radium Research Laboratory, Standard 
Chemical Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Chemical Properties and Relative Activities of the Radio- 
Products of Thorium. 

1913 George Oliver Curme, Jr., Chief Chemist, Carbide and Carbon Chem- 

icals Corporation, Glendinin, W.Va. 
The Thermal Decomposition of the Symmetrical Diary 1-Hydrazines. 

John William Edward Glattfeld, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, 
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Oxidation of d-Glucose in Alkaline Solution by Air as Well as 
by Hydrogen Peroxide. 

Paul Nicholas Leech, Research Chemist, American Medical Association, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Molecular Rearrangement of Triaryl Methyl Hydroxylamines; 
a New Interpretation for the Rearrangement of Ketoximes. 

Ethel Mary Terry (Mrs. H. N. McCoy), Assistant Professor of Chem- 
istry, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Velocity Coefficient of Saponification of Ethyl Acetate. 

1914 Harold Stanard Adams, Director of Research, Naugatuck Chemical 

Co., Naugatuck, Conn. 
Studies in Overvoltage. 

Arthur Wesley Martin, Superintendent, South Anhwei District, 
Methodist Church, Tunke, Anhwei, China. 
Studies on Solutions in Anhydrous Formic Acid. 

Agnes Fay Morgan, Associate Professor of Household Science, Uni- 
versity of California, Berkeley, Cal. 
I. Viscosities of Various Methyl and Ethyl Imidobenzoates and of 
the Sodium Salts of Para and Meta Nitrobenzoyl-chloroamides in 
Moderately Concentrated Aqueous Solutions. II. The Molecular 
Rearrangement of Some Triaryl Methylchloroamines. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 61 



1914 Harry Morrill Paine, Research Chemist, Box 393, Hartsdale, N.Y. 

The Effects of Salts on the Solubihty of Other Salts: 1. The Solu- 
bility Relations of a Very Soluble Bi-univalent Salt. 2. The 
Ionization of Bi-bivalent Salts. 
Harley Martin Plum, Chemist, Standard Chemical Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Extraction and Separation of the Radioactive Constituents of 
Carnotite. 
Bert Allen Stagner, Research Chemist, Union Oil Co., San Francisco. 
Cal. 
On the Molecular Rearrangements of Triarylmethyl Hydroxylamines. 
Clare Chrisman Todd, Professor of Chemistry, Washington Agricul- 
tural College, Pullman, Wash. 
The Action of Alkaline Hydrogen Peroxide on d. Galactose. 

1915 Clifford Daniel Carpenter, Associate Professor of Chemistry, 

Columbia University, New York, N.Y. 
The Addition Compounds of Organic Substances with Sulphuric Acid. 
Oscar Fred Hedenburg, Research Chemist, Mellon Institute of Indus- 
trial Research, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
On the Esters, as well as the Monomolecular /3- and 7-Lactones of 
d-Mannonic and d-Gluconic Acids; On Ortho Bis-d-Galactonic 
Acid, d-Galactonic 7-Lactone and Its Mono-Hydrate. 
Edmund Charles Humphery, Chemist, E. I. du Pont de Nemours Co., 
Wilmington, Del. 
Surface Tension at the Interface between Two Liquids. 
TowNES Randolph Leigh, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Chemistry, University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla. 
On Chlorimido Esters and Chlorimido Benzil. 
Edwin Daniel Leman, Chief Chemist, United States Radium Corpora- 
tion, Orange, N.J. 
The Relation between the Alpha-Ray Activities and Ranges of 
Radioactive Substances. 
Helen Tredway (Mrs. Evarts A. Graham), 4711 Westminster Place, 
St. Louis, Mo. 
The Thermal Decomposition of Diaryl Hydrazines. 
Ernest Dana Wilson, Director, Commercial Research Dept., George 
Batten Advertising Co., New York City. 
The Structure of Complex Atoms. 

1916 Groves Howard Cartledge, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Johns 

Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. 
A Study of the Emanation Method of Determining Thorium. 
Clyde Coleman, Research Chemist, Ault & Wiborg Co., Cincinnati, 
Ohio. 
Further Studies on the Behavior of the Alkali Metal Formates in 
(Anhydrous) Formic Acid. 
Ralph Edwin Hall, Research Chemist, Bureau of Mines, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Periodic System and the Properties of the Elements. The Free 
Energy of Dilution. The Freezing-Point Lowerings of Some Salts 
of Various Types of Ionization and of Salt Mixtures. 
Lawrence Melvin Henderson, Assistant Professor of Physical Chem- 
istry, The University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Ratio of Mesothorium to Thorium in Minerals. 
William Tudor Pearce, Professor of General Chemistry, North Dakota 
Agricultural College, Agricultural College, N.D. 
Ionization and Solubihty Relations of Salts of Higher Types, Inter- 
mediate Ions in Solutions of Unibivalent Salts and of Lanthanum 
lodate, a Triunivalent Salt. II. Solubilities of Very Soluble 
Higher Type Salts. 



62 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1916 WiLLARD Allen Roberts, Research Chemist, General Electric Company, 

Harrison, N.J. 
Studies on the Cobalt-Ammines. 

Stanley Davis Wilson, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Union Medical 
College, Peking, China. 
The Effect of Added Salts upon the Velocity of Saponification of 
Ethyl Acetate by Sodium Hydroxide. 

1917 Lester Aronberg, Research Chemist, Diana Chemical Co., Chicago, 111. 

The Spectrum of the Isotopes of the Lead. The Structure of the 
Bismuth Line a; = 4722A. 

Ralph Lyman Brown, Research Chemist, U.S. Bureau of Mines, Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
The Molecular Rearrangement of Sym. Di-triphenylmethylhydrazine. 

Sidney Marsh Cadwell, Research Chemist, United States Rubber Co., 
New York, N.Y. 
The Beckmann Rearrangement: Determinations of Minute Quan- 
tities of Gold. 

Earl Claudius Hamilton Davies, Associate Professor of Chemistry, 
University of West Virginia, Morgantown, W.Va. 
The Orientation of Molecules in the Surface of Liquids, the Energy 
Relations at Surfaces, Solubility, Adsorption, Emulsification, 
Molecular Association, and the Effects of Acids and Bases on 
Intel-facial Tension. 

Adeline Mae De Sale (Mrs. George K. Link), Instructor in Chemistry, 
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Velocity of Rearrangement of Benzoylazid. 

Milton Theodore Hanke, Research Instructor, Sprague Memorial 
Institute, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Oxidation of Maltose in Alkaline Solutions by Hydrogen Peroxide 
and by Air. The Preparation and Study of Maltobionic Acid. 

Frank Hynes Reed, Chemist, Tower Manufacturing Co., Newark, N.J. 
Studies in Conductivity. (A) Some Common Errors in the Deter- 
mination of the Conductivity of Solutions. (B) The Behavior of 
Mixtures of Two Salts Containing a Common Ion, in Anhydrous 
Formic Acid Solutions. 

James Kuhn Senior, Research Chemist, Fries and Fries, Cincinnati, 
Ohio. 
Molecular Rearrangements in the Triarylmethylazide and Triaryl- 
methylhydrazine Series. 

Herbert Johnson Smith, Professor of Chemistry, Mississippi Agri- 
cultural and Mechanical College, Agricultural College, Miss. 
Solubility Products of Carbonates. 

Ralph Kjempton Strong, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Chemistry, Reed College, Portland, Ore. 
Mesothorium-One and Radium; Their Isotopism and Enrichment. 

William De Garmo Turner, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Chemistry, School of Mines, University of Missouri, RoUa, Mo. 
The Diffusion of Gases and the Density of Chlorine. A Search for 
Possible Isotypes of Chlorine. 

1918 Denton Jacobs Brown, Associate Professor of Chemistry, University of 

Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. 
The Velocity of Decomposition of Benzoyl Peroxide. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 63 

1918 Frank Emerson Brown, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Iowa State 

College, Ames, Iowa. 
1. The Structure of the Surfaces of Liquids and Solubility as Related 
to the Work Done by the Attraction of Two Liquid Surfaces on 
Each Other. 2. A Standardization of the Method for the Deter- 
mination of Surface Tension or Free Surface Energy by the Drop- 
Weight Method. 3. A Simple Apparatus for the Determination 
of Surface Tension. 

Elmer Newman Bunting, Research Associate in Ceramics, University 
of Illinois, Champaign, 111. 
Transport Numbers of Potassium, Sodium, and Calcium Formates in 
Anhydrous Formic Acid. 

George Lindenberg Clark, National Research Fellow, Harvard 
University, Cambridge, Mass. 
■ 1. The Structure of the Surfaces of Liquids. 2. Secondary Valence 
and Werner's Coordination Number. 

WiLBY T. GoocH, Professor and Head of the Department of Chemistry, 
Baylor University, Waco, Tex. 

1. Effect of Light on the Velocity of Saponification of Ethyl Acetate. 

2. The Velocity Coefficient of the Saponification of Methyl Acetate. 
Homer Henry Helmick, Research Laboratory, Radium Company of 

Colorado, Denver, Colo. 
A New Method for the Determination of Thorium in Monazite Sand. 
Herbert Hiram King, Professor and Head of the Department of Chem- 
istry, Kansas State Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kan. 
1. The Structure of Liquids: Adsorption at Liquid — Liquid Inter- 
faces and the Partition of a Solute between Two Liquids. 2. The 
Structure of Liquids: Adsorption, Solubility and the Double 
Electric Layer. 
Raymond David Mullinix, Professor of Chemistry, Rockford College, 
Rockford, 111. 
Potassium Permanganate. Studies in Conductivity IV. 
Ralph Emory Nelson, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Purdue Uni- 
versity, Lafayette, Ind. 
The Coefficient of the Velocity of the Reaction between Sodium 
Hydroxide and Ethyl Acetate. 
Stephen Popoff, Instructor in Chemistry, Iowa State University, Iowa 
City, Iowa. 
Studies of Manganates and Permanganates. I. The Course of the 
Action between Manganese Dioxide, Potassium Hydroxide and 
Oxygen, and the Manufacture of Potassium Permanganate. 
Edward Noel Roberts, Research Chemist, U.S. Industrial Alcohol 
Co., Curtis Bay, Baltimore, Md. 
Velocity of Saponification of Ethyl Formate. 
Harry Clyde Trimble, Associate Professor of Chemistry, University of 
North Dakota, University, N.D. 
The Effect of Electric Currents in Attempts to Induce Molecular 
Rearrangements. 

1919 Ray Quincy Brewster, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, University 

of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. 
I. Symmetrical Tetrapropylethane. II. Reduction of Nitrotri- 

phenylamine. 
Elvah Harley Grafton, Research Chemist, Quaker City Rubber Co., 

Philadelphia, Pa. 
The Adsorption of Benzene Derivatives on the Surface of Water. 

The Work Done by the Attraction between a Mercury Surface and 

the Surface of an Organic Liquid. 



64 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1919 Morris Selig Kharasch, National Research Fellow in Chemistry, 

University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. ^^ 

Colors of the Second Order. Mercuri-Organic Derivatives. 
George Elmer Miller, Research Chemist, The Upjohn Co., Kalamazoo, 
Mich. 
Preparation of Pure Cyanogen Chloride; Preparation and Study of 
d- and 1-Beta-Gamma-Dioxybutyric Acid. 
Charles H. Milligan, Research Chemist, Proctor & Gamble Co., Cincin- 
nati, Ohio. 
The Preparation of dl-P-Methyl-Isopropyl Methyl-Phenyl Hydra- 
zine. The Isolation of Pure d-P-Methyl-Isopropyl Methyl- 
Phenyl Aniline. 
Lathrop Emerson Roberts, Physical Chemist, U.S. Bureau of Mines, 
Berkeley, Cal. 
A Study of Phase Boundaries. 
Henry John Rossbacher, Chief of Research Laboratory, Western 
Electric Company, Chicago, 111. 
M-Tolyl-Ethyl-Barbituric Acid. 
Karl Theodor Steik, Associate Professor of Chemistry, University of 
Florida, Gainesville, Fla. 
The Effect of Alkali upon Portland Cement. 

1920 Steward Basterfield, Professor of Chemistry, University of Saskat- 

chewan, Saskatoon, Sask., Canada. 
Derivatives of Isourea and Their Pharmacological Action. 
YiNG Chang Cheng, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, National Uni- 
versity, Peking, China. 
Cohesion, Adhesion, Tensile Strength, Tensile Energy, Negative 
Surface Energy, Interfacial Tension, and Molecular Attraction. 
Amando Clemente, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, University of the 
Phihppines, Manila, P.I. 
The Relation between Pore Size and Adsorption in Charcoal. 
Frank Louis DeBeuklelaer, Research Chemist, Swift and Co., Chi- 
cago, 111. 
Derivatives of Phenylethylacetic Acid and of Phenyldiethylacetic 
Acid. 
DwiGHT Tarbell Ewing, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Michigan 
State Agricultural College, East Lansing, Mich. 
I. The Densities and Adsorption and Desorption Properties of Gas 
Mask Charcoals. II. The Effects of Acids and Bases on the 
Surface Energy of /3-/3-Dichlorethyl Sulphide ("Mustard Gas")- 
Warren Walter Ewing, Assistant Professor of Physical Chemistry, 
Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa. 
The Attraction of Mercury for Other Liquids. 
LoTjis Melvin Larsen, Research Chemist, Ault and Wiborg Co., 
Cincinnati, Ohio. 
I. Nitrotriphenylamines. II. The Oxidation of Diaminophenolos. 
Mary Meda Rising, Instructor in Chemistry, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
I. The Preparation of Phenylethylbarbituric Acid. II. The 
Preparation of Para-Ureido-Phenylacetylurea, and Related Com- 
pounds. III. An Attempt to Filter the Enzymes of Milk. 
John Edward Schott, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Pennsylvania 
State College, State College, Pa. 
I. Oxidation of Benzamide. II. Derivatives of Phenylethylbar- 
bituric Acid. 
Herman Vance Tartar, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, University 
of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 
The Constitution of Murexide and the Theory of Dyes. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE 65 

1921 Henry Leon Cox, Chemist, Beechnut Packing Co., Brooklyn, N.Y. 
Some Derivatives of Linolic Acid. 

Lillian V. Eichelberger, Research Instructor in Chemistry, University 
of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Transmutation of Maleic to Fumaric Acid. 

Aaron Feldman, 654 Beck St., New York, N.Y. 

The Spreading Coefficient: A Study of the Spreading Properties of 
Some Organic Liquids. 

Leo Finkelstein, Research Chemist, LT.S. Bureau of Mines, Washing- 
ton, D.C. 
I. Determination of Radium in Meteorites by the Emanation. 
Method. II. Measurement of Ranges of Alpha Particles by a 
Modified Bragg Apparatus. 

Aubrey Chester Grubb, Assistant Professor of Physical Chemistry, 
LTniversity of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Sask., Canada. 
Chemical Reactions in the Corona. 

Martin Charles Edward Hanke, National Research Fellow in Chem- 
istry, LTniversity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
An Attempt to Prepare a Mercury Derivative of Dioxydiaminoarseno- 
benzene (Arsphenamine) . 

Anson Hayes, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Iowa State College, 
Ames, Iowa. 
Separation of the Element Chlorine into Isotopes. 

Vesttjs Twiggs Jackson, Chemist, 926 Crescent Place, Chicago, 111. 

The Reaction between Potassium Hydroxide, Manganese Dioxide 
and Oxygen. 

IsADORE Meyer Jacobsohn, Independent Research in Chemistry, 
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Mercuri-organic Derivatives. 

Alfred Edward Jurist, Research Chemist, Enterprise Soap Works, 
Philadelphia, Pa. 
A Rearrangement of the Benzilic Acid Type in the Aliphatic Series. 

Robert Stern Landauer, Research Department, Standard X-Ray Co., 
Chicago, 111. 
Triatomic Hydrogen. 

Katharine Lucille McCluskey, St. Xavier Academy, Chicago, 111., 
and Independent Research in Chemistry, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
Some New Derivatives of Quinaldine. 

Clarence John Monroe, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, School of 
Mines, RoUa, Mo. 
On the Relation of the Compressibility of a Liquid and Its Adsorption 
and Absorption by Charcoal. 
Robert Sanderson Mulliken, National Research Fellow in Chemistry, 
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
I. The Separation of Isotopes. Theory of the Resolution of Isotopic 
Mixtures by Diffusion and Similar Processes; Experimental Separa- 
tion of Mercury by Evaporation in a Vacuum. II. The Effect of 
Acids and Bases on Interfacial Tension. 
Joseph Jaroslav Pelc, Independent Research, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. • f TT 

Molecular Rearrangements in Some Derivatives of Unsaturated 
Higher Fatty Acids. 



66 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1921 George Ross Robertson, Instructor in Chemistry, University of 
California (Southern Branch), Los Angeles, Cal. 
Organic Derivatives of Arsenic. 
Frank V. Sander, Instructor in Physiological Chemistry, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Preparation and Resolution of dl-1.3, Dihydroxybutyric Acid. 
James Hollingsworth Clemmer Smith, Assistant Professor of Chem- 
istry, Colorado College, Colorado Springs, Colo. 
I. Estimation of Sodium Hyposulphite. II. Arsenic Derivatives of 
Phenylaminoacetic Acid. 
Edgar Wertheim, Associate Professor of Chemistry, University of 
Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. 
Preparation of dl-p-Secondary Butyl Phenylhydrazine. Resolution 
of dl-p-Secondary Butyl Aniline. 



EARTH SCIENCE GROUP 
GEOLOGY AND PALEONTOLOGY 

1895 Charles Henry Gordon, Professor of Geology, University of Tennessee, 

Knoxville, Tenn. 
Syenite-Gneiss from the Apatch Region, Ottawa County, Canada. 
Henry Barnard Kxjmmel, State Geologist of New Jersey, Trenton, N.J. 
Lake Passaic: An Extinct Glacial Lake. 

1896 Ermine Cowles Case, Professor of Historical Geology, University of 

Michigan, Ann, Arbor, Mich. 
On the Osteology and Relationships of Protostega. 

1897 Harry Foster Bain, Chief, Bureau of Mines, Washington, D.C. 

Relations of the Wisconsin and Kansas Drift Sheets in Central 
Iowa, and Related Phenomena. 

1900 Thomas Cramer Hopkins, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Geology, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y. 
The Genesis of Certain Limonite Ores of Pennsylvania. 
William Newton Logan, Professor of Economic Geology, Indiana 

University, Bloomington, Ind., and State Geologist. 
A North American Epicontinental Sea of Jurassic Age. 

1901 Nevin Melancthon Fenneman, Head of the Department of Geology, 

University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
The Development of the Profile of Equilibrium of the Subaqueous 
Shore Terrace. 

1902 Fred Harvey Hall Calhoun, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Geology, Clemson Agricultural College, Clemson College, S.C. 
The Relations of the Kewatin Ice Sheet to the Mountain Glaciers 
of Montana. 
tWiLLiAM George Tight. 

Origin and Development of the Ohio River. 
Frank Alonzo Wilder, President, Southern Gypsum Co., North Hols- 
ton, Va. 
The Age and Origin of the Gypsum of Webster County, Iowa. 

1903 William Clinton Alden, Geologist, United States Geological Survey, 

Washington, D.C. 
The Evolution of the Darien Lobe of the Lake Michigan Glacier. 
Wallace Walter Atwood, President and Professor of Geography, 

Clark University, Worcester, Mass. 
The Glaciation of the Wasatch Mountains. 

1904 William Harvey Emmons, Head of the Department of Geology, Univer- 

sity of Minnesota, Minneapolis, INIinn., and State Geologist of 
Minnesota. 
The Geology of Haystack Mountain, Montana. 

1905 Edwin Bayer Branson, Head of the Department of Geology, University 

of Missom-i, Columbia, Mo. 
The Structure and Relationships of the American Labjrrinthodon- 

tidae. 
Alfred Reginald Schultz, Manager, Burkhardt Co., Hudson, Wis. 

The Underground Water Supply of Wisconsin, Northern lUinois, 

and the Northern Peninsula of Michigan. 

t Deceased. 

67 



68 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



1907 Stephen Reid Capps, Geologist, United States Geological Survey, 

Washington, D.C. 
The Pleistocene Geology of the Leadville Quadrangle, Colorado. 

RoLLiN Thomas Chamberlin, Associate Professor of Geology, University 
of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Gases Occluded in Rocks. 

1908 Roy Lee Moodie, Assistant Professor of Anatomy, University of Illinois, 

Urbana, 111. 
Contribution to a Monograph of the North American Extinct 
Amphibia. 

1909 Edson Sunderland Bastin, Professor of Economic Geology, University 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Chemical Composition as a Criterion in Identifying Metamorphosed 
Sediments. 
Elwood S. Moore, Head of the Department of Geology and Dean of 
School of Mines, Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa. 
Geology of the Onaman Iron Range District. 
Clinton Raymond Stauffer, Professor of Geology, University of 
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Relationship of the Middle Devonian Faunas of Ohio. 

1910 Allen David Hole, Professor and Head of the Department of Geology, 

Earlham College, Richmond, Ind. 
The Pleistocene Geology of the Telluride (Colo.) Quadrangle. 
John Littlefield Tilton, Associate Professor of Geology, State Uni- 
versity of West Virginia, Morgantown, W.Va. 
The Pleistocene Deposits of Warren County, Iowa. 
Joseph Bertram Umpleby, Head of the Department of Geology, Univer- 
sity of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla. 
Geology and Ore Deposits of the Republic District, Washington. 

1911 Arthur Carleton Trowbridge, Professor of Geology, State University 

of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
The Geology of the Owena Valley California Region with Special 
Reference to the Terrestrial Deposits. 

1912 Harold Caswell Cooke, Professor of Geology, McGill University, 

Montreal, Can. 
The Secondary Enrichment of Silver Ores. 

1913 J Harlen Bretz, Associate Professor of Geology, University of Chicago, 

Chicago, 111. 
The Glaciation of the Puget Sound Basin. 
Albert Dudley Brokaw, Petroleum Geologist, New York. 

The Solution and Precipitation of Gold in Secondary Enrichment of 
Ore Deposits. 
Herrick East Wilson, Paleontologist, 224 West College St., Oberlin, 
Ohio. 
Evolutional Changes in the Monocyclic Crinoid Bases. 

1914 Eliot Blackwelder, Professor of Geology, Stanford University, Cal. 

Post-Cretaceous History of the Mountains of Central Western 
Wyoming. 
George Frederick Kay, Head of the Department of Geology, and Dean 
of the College of Liberal Arts, State University of Iowa, Iowa City, 
Iowa, and State Geologist. 
The Geology and Ore Deposits of Riddle's Quadrangle, Oregon. 
Maurice Goldsmith Mehl, Assistant Professor of Geology, University 
of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. 
The Phytosauria of the Rocky Mountain Region. 



EARTH SCIENCES 69 

1915 Edward Moore Jackson Burwash, Assistant Professor of Geology, 

University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Can. 
The Geology of Vancouver and Its Surroundings. 
Joel Ernest Carman, Professor of Geology, Ohio State University, 
Columbus, Ohio. 
The Pleistocene Geology of Northwestern Iowa. 
James Henry Lees, Assistant State Geologist of Iowa, Des Moines, Iowa. 

The Geological History of the Des Moines Valley. 
KiRTLEY Fletcher Mather, Professor of Geology, Denison University, 
Granville, Ohio, and Geologist, U.S. Geological Survey. 
The Fauna of the Morrow Group of Arkansas and Oklahoma. 
Terence Thomas Quirke, Associate Professor of Geology, University 
of Illinois, Urbana, 111. 
Geology of Espanola District. 
Luther Crocker Snider, Chief Geologist, Empire Gas and Fuel Co., 
Bartlesville, Okla. 
The Geology and Paleontology of the Mississippian Rocks of North- 
Eastern Oklahoma. 
Eugene Austin Stephenson, Chief Geologist, South Penn Oil Co., 
Pittsburgh, Pa. 
Hydrothermal Alteration of Feldspars. 

1916 fHERMAN DoUTHITT. 

Structure and Relationships of Diplocaulus, an American Permian 
Amphibian. 
Laura Hatch, Assistant Professor of Geology, Smith College, North- 
ampton, Mass. 
Geology of the Area about Westerly, Rhode Island. 
Morris Morgan Leighton, Assistant Professor of Geology, University 
of Illinois, Urbana, 111., and Geologist, State Geological Survey of 
Illinois. 
The Southwest Border of the lowan Drift in Iowa. 
Raymond Cecil Moore, Head of the Department of Geology, University 
of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan., and State Geologist. 
The Stratigraphy of the Mississippian System of Missouri. 
William Arthur Tarr, Professor of Geology, University of Missouri, 
Columbia, Mo. 
The Barite Deposits of Missouri. 
Charles Weldon Tomlinson, Petroleum Geologist, Ardmore, Okla. 

Correlation of the Middle Paleozoic Sedimentary Formations of the 
Rocky Mountains. 

1917 Gilbert Haven Cady, Head of the Department of Geology, University 

of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. 
The LaSalle Anticline. 
Charles Elijah Decker, Associate Professor of Geology, University of 
Oklahoma, Norman, Okla. 
Studies in Minor Folds. 
John Knox Knox, Petroleum Geologist, Lahore, India. 

The Geology of he Asbestos Range near Coleraine, Quebec. 

1918 James Harold Hance, Associate Director, State Geological Survey, 

LTrbana, 111. 
Geology and Mineral Resources of the Wellsville, Ohio, Quadrangle. 

1919 Ralph Works Chaney, Research Associate, Carnegie Institution, Uni- 

versity of CaUfornia, Berkeley, Cal. 
The Flora of the Eagle Creek Formation. 

t Deceased. 



70 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1919 Horace Noble Coryell, Instructor in Geology, Columbia University, 

New York City. 
Bryozoon Fauna of the Stones River Formation of Central Tennessee. 

1920 Paul MacClintock, Instructor in Geology, University of Chicago, 

Chicago, 111. 
The Pleistocene History of the Lower Wisconsin Valley. 
Bertram Reid MacKay, Petroleum Geologist, India. 

Geology and Physiography of the Beauceville Map Area, Quebec, 
with Special Reference to Placer Gold Deposits. 
George Charlton Matson, Vice-President and General Manager, 
Schermerhorn Oil Co., Tulsa, Okla. 
The Phosphate Deposits of Florida. 

1921 Arthur Charles Bevan, Instructor in Geology, University of lUinois, 

Urbana, 111. 
Summary of the Geology of the Beartooth Mountains, Montana. 
Vivian Ouray Tansey, Geologist, Tulsa, Okla. 

A Paleontological Study of the Helderberg and Oriskany Formation 
of Ste. Genevieve County, Missouri. 
Roy Arthur Wilson, Associate Professor of Geology, and State Geolo- 
gist, University of South Dakota, Vermillion, S.D. 
Geology of a Part of the Mission Range, Montana. 

GEOGRAPHY 

1907 fFREDERicK Valentine Emerson. 

A Geographic Interpretation of New York City. 

1914 Wellington Downing Jones, Associate Professor of Geography, Uni- 

versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Geography of Northern Patagonia. 
Almon Ernest Parkins, Professor of Geography, George Peabody College 
for Teachers, Nashville, Tenn. 
The Historical Geography of Detroit. 
Stephen Sargent Visher, Associate Professor of Geography, Indiana 
University, Bloomington, Ind. 
The Geography of South Dakota. 

1915 Carl Ortwin Sauer, Professor of Geography, University of Michigan, 

Ann Arbor, Mich. 
The Geography of the Ozark Highland of Missouri. 
1917 Charles Carlyle Colby, Associate Professor of Geography, University 
of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Geography of Southeastern Minnesota. 

1920 Robert Swanton Platt, Assistant Professor of Geography, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Resources and Economic Interests of the Bermudas. 

1921 Helen Mabel Strong, Assistant Professor of Geography, University of 

Missouri, Columbia, Mo. 
The Geography of Cleveland. 

tDeceased. 



BIOLOGICAL GROUP 
ZOOLOGY 

1894 Herbert Parlin Johnson, Cedaredge, Colo. 

A Contribution to the Morphology and Biology of the Stentors. 
Frank Rattray Lillie, Professor of Embryology and Chairman of the 

Department of Zoology, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111.; 

Director, Marine Biological Laboratory. 
The Embryology of the Unionidae. 

1895 Albert Chauncey Eycleshymer, Professor of Anatomy and Dean of 

College of Medicine, University of Illinois, Urbana, 111. 
Early Development of Amblystoma with Observations on Some Other 

Vertebrates. 
William Albert Locy, Professor of Zoology, Northwestern University, 

Evanston, 111. 
Contribution to the Structure and Development of the Vertebrate 

Head. 

1896 Howard Stedham Brode, Professor of Biology, Whitman College, 

Walla Walla, Wash. 
A Contribution to the Morphology of Dero vaga. 
Cornelia Maria Clapp, Professor Emeritus of Zoology, Mount Holyoke 
College, South Hadley, Mass. 
The Lateral Line System of Batrachus Tau. 
Agnes Mary Claypole (Mrs. Robert O. Moody), 2826 Garber St., 
Berkeley, Cal. 
The Embryology and Oogenesis of Anurida maritima (Gu6r). 
Albert Davis Mead, Professor of Comparative Anatomy, Brown Uni- 
versity, Providence, R.I. 
The Early Development of Marine AnneUda. 

1897 Charles Lawrence Bristol, Professor of Zoology, New York University, 

New York, N.Y. 
The Metamerism of NepheUs. 
Samuel J. Holmes, Professor of Zoology, University of CaUfomia, Berke- 
ley, Cal. 
The Early Development of Planorbis trivolvis. 
John P. Munson, Head of Biology, Normal School, Ellensburg, Wash. 
The Ovarian Egg of Limulus: A Contribution to the Problem of the 
Centrosome and Yolk-Nucleus. 

1899 Emily Ray Gregory, 501 South Forty-Second street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Observations on the Development of the Excretory System in 
Turtles. 
Aaron Louis Treadwell, Professor of Zoology, Vassar College, Pough- 
keepsie, N.Y. 
The Cytogeny of Podarke. 

1900 Michael Frederic Guyer, Professor of Zoology, University of Wiscon- 

sin, Madison, Wis. 
The Spermatogenesis of Normal and Hybrid Pigeons. 

1901 Elliott Rowland Downing, Associate Professor of Natural Science in 

the College of Education, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Spermatogenesis in Hydra. 

71 



72 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1901 WiLHELMiNA Entemann (Mrs. Francis B. Key), Race Betterment Founda- 

tion, Battle Creek, Mich. 
Coloration of Polistes (the Common Paper Wasp). 
Ralph Stayner Lillie, Biologist, Nela Research Laboratory, Cleveland, 
Ohio. 
.Excretory Organs of Arenicola cristata. 
Virgil Everett McCaskill, President, State Normal School, Superior, 
Wis. 
The Metamerism of Hirudo Medicinalis. 
John McClelland Prather, Teacher of Zoology, Central High School, 
St. Louis, Mo. 
The Skeleton of Salaux Microdon. 

1902 Eugene Howard Harper, Bedford, Va. 

History of the Fertilization and Early Development of the Pigeon's 
Egg. 

1903 Bennet Mills Allen, Professor of Zoology, University of Kansas, Law- 

rence, Kan. 
The Development of the Ovary and the Testis in the Mammals. 
William J. Moenkhaus, Professor of Physiology, Indiana University, 

Bloomington, Ind. 
The Development of the Hybrids between Fundulus heteroclitus 

and Menidia notata with Especial Reference to the Behavior of 

the Maternal and Paternal Chromatin. 

1904 Charles Dwight Marsh, United States Department of Agriculture, 

Washington, D.C. 
The Plankton of Lake Winnebago and Green Lake. 
John William Scott, Professor of Zoology, University of Wyoming, 
Laramie, Wyo. 
Studies in the Experimental Embryology of some Marine Annelids. 
Charles Zeleny, Professor of Zoology, University of Illinois, Urbana, 111. 
Studies in Regulation and Regeneration. 

1905 Lynds Jones, Professor of Zoology, University of Illinois, Urbana, 111. 

The Development of the First Down and Its Relation to the Definitive 
Feather. 
Horatio Hackett Newman, Professor of Zoology, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Morphogeny of the Chelonian Carapace. 

1906 James Francis Abbott, Commercial Attache, United States Embassy, 

Tokyo, Japan. 
The Morphology of Coeloplana. 

1907 Frank Eugene Lutz, Curator, American Museum of Natural History, 

New York, N.Y. 
The Variations and Correlations of the Taxonomic Characters of 
Gryllus. 
Oscar Riddle, Research Staff, Carnegie Station for Experimental Evolu- 
tion, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. 
The Genesis of Fault-Bars in Feathers and the Cause of Alternation 
of Light and Dark Fundamental Bars. 
Victor Ernest Shelpord, Associate Professor of Zoology, University of 
Ilhnois, Urbana, 111., and Biologist for Ilhnois Natural History 
Survey. 
The Life-Histories and Larval Habits of the Tiger Beetles. 
Charles Henry Turner, Sumner High School, St. Louis, Mo. 

The Homing of Ants : An Experimental Study of Ant Behavior. 

1908 Charles Christopher Adams, Professor of Forest Zoology and Director 

of the Roosevelt Wild Life Forest Experiment Station, New York 
State College of Forestry, Syracuse, N.Y. 
The Geographic Variations and Relations of lo. 



BIOLOGICAL GROUP 73 



1908 Mary Blount, Teacher, Chicago Normal College, Chicago, 111. 

The Early Development of the Pigeon's Egg from Fertilization to 
the Organization of the Periblast. 
Wallace Craig, Professor of Philosophy, University of Maine, Orono, Me. 

Expression of the Emotions in the Pigeons. 
John Thomas Patterson, Professor of Zoology, University of Texas, 
Austin, Tex. 
Gastrulation in the Pigeon's Egg. 

Katashi Takahashi, Professor of Zoology, Gakushinin College, Tokyo, 
Japan. 
Histogenesis of the Lateral Line System in Necturus. 
George Washington Tannreuther, Assistant Professor of Zoology, 
University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. 
History of the Germ Cells and Early Embryology of Certain Aphids. 

1909 Marian Lydia Shorey. 

The Effect of the Destruction of Peripheral Areas on the Differentia- 
tion of the Neuroblasts. 

Harry Lewis Wieman, Professor of Zoology, University of Cincinnati, 
Cincinnati, Ohio. 
A Study in the Germ Cells of Leptinotarsa signaticolUs. 

1910 George William Bartelmez, Associate Professor of Anatomy, Uni- 

versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The BilateraUty of the Pigeon's Egg; A Study in Egg Organization. 

1911 Robert Kirkland Nabours, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Zoology, Kansas State Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kan. 
Mendelian Inheritance in Orthoptera. 

1912 Warder Clyde Allee, Assistant Professor of Zoology, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Effect of Dissolved Gases on the Behavior of Isopods. 
Harriett May Allyn, Dean of the College for Women, Hackett Medical 
College, Canton, China. 
A Contribution to the Analysis of FertiUzation in Chaetopterus. 

1913 Joseph Kumler Breitenbecker, Associate Professor of Zoology, Uni- 

versity of Oklahoma, Normaji, Okla. 

The Effect of Varying Water Content in the Medium upon the Activi- 
ties of Leptinotarsa decemUneata (Say) on Introduction into a 
Desert Habitat. 
Neil Stanley Dungay, Professor of Biology, Carleton College, North- 
field, Minn. 

A Study of the Effects of Injury upon the Fertilizing Power of 

Sperm. 

1914 Lewis Victor Heilbrunn, Assistant Professor of Zoology, L^niversity 

of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
Studies in Artificial Parthenogenesis II. Physical Changes in the 
Arbacia Egg. 

Francis LeRoy Landacre, Professor of Anatomy, Ohio State University, 
Columbus, Ohio. 
The Origin of the Cranial Ganglia in Ameiurus. 

1915 Libbie Henrietta Hyman, Research Assistant in Zoology, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
An Analysis of the Process of Regeneration in Certain Microdrilous 
OUgochaetes. 
Bertha Edith Martin, Instructor in Zoology, Mount Holyoke College, 
South Hadley, Mass. 
Tooth Development in Dasj^jus novemcinctus. 



74 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1916 Ernest Everett Just, Professor of Zoology, Howard University, Wash- 

ington, D.C. 
Studies of Fertilization in Platynereis Megalops. 
Carl Richard Moore, Assistant Professor of Zoology, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Superposition of Fertilization on Parthenogenesis. 

1917 Edwin J. Cohn, Fellow of the National Research Council. 

Studies on the Physiology of Spermatozoa. 

1918 Elinor Helene Behre, Assistant Professor of Zoology, Louisiana State 

University, Baton Rouge, La. _ 

An Experimental Study of Acclimation to Temperature in Planaria 

Dorotocephala. 
Wilfred H. Osgood, Curator of the Department of Zoology, Field 

Museum of Natural History, Chicago, 111. 
A Monographic Study of the American Marsupial, Caenolestes. 

1919 Albert William Bellamy, Instructor in Zoology, University of Chicago, 

Chicago, 111. 
Differential Susceptibility as a Basis for Modification and Control of 

Early Development in the Frog. 
Wyman Reed Green, Professor and Head of the Department of Biology, 

LTniversity of Chattanooga, Chattanooga, Tenn. 
Studies in the Life Cycle of Simocephalus vetulus. 

1920 Benjamin Harrison Willier, Instructor in Zoology, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Structures and Homologies of Free-Martin Gonads. 

1921 James William Buchanan, Instructor in Zoology, Yale University, 

New Haven, Conn. 
The Control of Head Formation in Planaria by Means of Anesthetics. 
John Wood MacArthur, Lecturer in Genetics and Experimental Biology, 

University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 
A Comparative Study of Susceptibility in Planaria and Other Forms 

by Means of Electrolytes and Vital Dyes. 

ANATOMY 

1899 Irving Hardesty, Professor of Anatomy, Tulane University, New Orleans, 
La. 
The Number and Arrangement of the Fibers Forming the Spinal 
Nerves of the Frog. 

1902 Shinkishi Hatai, Professor of Anatomy, Tohoku Imperial University, 

Sendai, Japan. 
Studies on the Nervous System of the White Rat and Foetal Cat. 

1903 ICharles Emerson Ingbert. 

An Enumeration of the MeduUated Nerve Fibers in the Dorsal Roots 
of the Spinal Nerves of Man. 
1905 Stephen Walter Ranson, Professor of Anatomy, Northwestern Uni- 
versity Medical School, Chicago, 111. 
Retrograde Degeneration in Spinal Nerves. 
1907 Emie Goetsch, Professor of Surgery and Surgeon-in-Chief, Long Island 
Hospital Medical College, Brooklyn, N.Y. 
The Structure of the Mammalian Oesophagus. 
Edwin Garvey Kirk, Physician, 902 E. 55th St., Chicago, 111. 

The Histogenesis of the Gastric Glands. 
John Sundwall, Associate Director of Hygiene, Public Health, and 
Physical Education, Universit}^ of Michigan, Ann Ai'bor, Mich. 
The Structure of the Lachrymal Gland. 
t Deceased. 



BIOLOGICAL GROUP 75 

1909 tR-ALPH Edward Sheldon. 

The Olfactory Tracts and Centers in Teleosts. 

1910 fCHARLES BrOOKOVER. 

The Olfactory Nerve, the Nervus Terminalis and the Preoptic 
Sympathetic System in Amia calva, L. 

1911 Paul Stillt\^ll McKibben, Professor of Anatomy, Western University, 

London, Ont. 
The Nervus Terminahs in Urodele Amphibia. 

1912 Edmund Vincent Cowdry, Rockefeller Institute, New York, N.Y. 

Mitochondria and Other Cytoplasmic Constituents of the Spinal 
GangUon Cells of the Pigeon. 

1913 Charles Henry Swift, Assistant Professor of Anatomy, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Origin and Early History of the Primordial Germ-cells in the Chick. 
1915 Elizabeth Caroline Crosby, Instructor in Anatomy, University of 

Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
The Telencephalon of AlUgator Mississippiensis. 

1917 Marion Hines (Mrs. Leonard Loeb), Instructor in Anatomy, University 

of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Studies in the Growth and Differentiation of the Telencephalon. 
I. The Fissura Hippocampi. 

1918 Percival Bailey, Assistant Resident, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, 

Boston, Mass. 

The Morphology of the Roof-Plate of the Forebrain and the Lateral 
Choroid Plexuses in the Human Embryo. 
Elbert Clark, Physician, Chicago, 111. 

Regeneration of Medullated Nerves in the Absence of Embryonic 
Nerve Fibers Following Experimental Non-traumatic Degenera- 
tion. 

1919 Luther Sherman Ross, Professor of Zoology, Drake University, Des 

Moines, Iowa. 
Cytology of Large Nerve Cells of the Crayfish (Cambarus). 
1921 Fredric Max Nicholson, Division of Pathology and Bacteriology, 

Rockefeller Institute, New York, N.Y. 
The Changes in Amount and Distribution of the Iron-containing 

Proteins of Nerve Cells Following Injury to Their Axones. 

PHYSIOLOGY 

1896 Elizabeth Cooke, San Diego Normal School, San Diego, Cal. 

Investigations in the Asmotic Properties of the Muscle. 
Samuel Steen Maxwell, Professor of Physiology, University of Cal- 
ifornia, Berkeley, Cal. 
Contributions to the Nerve Physiology of Annelids. 

1897 Elias Potter Lyon, Professor of Physiology and Dean of Medical School, 

ITniversity of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
A Contribution to Animal Geotropism. 

fjEANETTE CoRA WeLCH. 

On the Measurement of Mental Activity through Muscular Activity. 

1898 William Douwes Zoethout, Professor of Physiology, Bennett Medical 

School, Chicago, 111. 
The Physiological Effects of High Temperatures and Lack of Oxygen 
upon Lower Organisms. 

1899 fWESLEY Walker Norman. 

The Reaction of Lower Animals upon Injuries and the Theory of 
Pain Sensations, 
t Deceased. 



76 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1900 Walter Eugene Garrey, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Physiology, Tulane University, New Orleans, La. 
The Effect of Ion upon the Aggregation of Infusoria. 

1901 Anne Moore, Writer, 3 Banks St., New York City. 

The Effect of Electrolytes on Rigor Mortis. 

1902 fARTHUR White Greeley. 

Studies on the Effects of Low Temperatures upon Morphogenetic 
Processes. 
Charles Hugh Neilson, Professor of Medicine, St. Louis University, 
St. Louis, Mo. 
The Hydrolysis and Synthesis of Fats by Platinum Black. 
Ralph Waldo Webster, Assistant Professor of Medical Jurisprudence, 
Rush Medical College, Chicago, 111. 
On Osmotic and Ionic Effects in the Absorption of Liquids by Animal 
Tissues. 

1905 Orville Harry Brown, Physician, Phoenix, Ariz. 

The Effects of Certain Salts on Kidney Excretion with Special 
Reference to Glycosuria. 
Russell Burton Opitz, Associate Professor of Physiology, Columbia 
University, New York, N.Y. 
The Periodic and Irregular Variations in the Venous Blood-Flow. 

1907 Charles Claude Guthrie, Professor of Physiology, University of 

Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 

The Relation of Pressure in the Coronary Vessels to the Activity 
of the Isolated Heart and Some Closely Related Problems. 
Frank Henry Pike, Associate Professor of Physiology, Columbia Uni- 
versity, New York, N.Y. 

The Resuscitation of the Respiratory and Other Bulbar Nervous 
Mechanisms, with Special Reference to the Question of Their 
Automaticity. 

1908 Wales Harrison Packard, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Biology, Bradley Polytechnic Institute, Peoria, 111. 
On Resistance to Lack of Oxygen in Animals. 

1909 Frank Christian Becht, Professor of Physiology and Pharmacology, 

Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, 111. 
The Concentration of Hemopronius and Related Hadeis in the Various 

Body Fluids of Normal and Immune Animals. 
James Richard Greer, Instructor in Medicine, Rush Medical College, 

Chicago, 111. 
The Concentration of Bacterial Opsohins and Related Bodies in the 

Various Body Fluids of Normal and Immune Animals. 
Walter Joseph Meek, Professor of Physiology, LTniversity of Wisconsin, 

Madison, Wis. 
Physiological Restoration and Anatomical Regeneration of the 

Small Intestine after Transection. 

1911 Clyde Richard Brooks, Professor of Physiology and Dean of the Medical 
School, University of Alabama, L'niversity, Ala. 
The Effect of Lesions of the Dorsal Nerve on the Reflex Excitability 
of the Spinal Cord. 
Arno Benedict Luckhardt, Associate Professor of Physiology, Univer- 
sity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
The Relation of the Spleen to the Fixation of Antigens and the 
Production of Immune Bodies. 

1913 Ole Olufson Stoland, Professor of Physiology, University of Kansas, 
Lawrence, Kan. 
The Influence of Parothyroid Tetany on the Liver and the Pancreas. 

t Deceased. 



BIOLOGICAL GROUP 77 



1913 Arthur Lawrie Tatum, Assistant Professor of Pharmacology, Uni- 

versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Studies in Experimental Cretinism. 

1914 Charles Edwin King, Acting Professor of Physiology and Pharmacology, 

Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. 
The Origin of the Diastases of the Blood and the Lymph. 

1915 Harvey Raymond Basinger, Physician, Mountain Lake, Minn. 

The Control of Experimental Cretinims. 

Walter Lee Gaines, Professor of Milk Production, University of Illinois, 
Urbana, 111. 
A Contribution to the Physiology of Lactation. 

Franklin Chambers McLean, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Medicine, Peking Union Medical College, Peking, China. 
The Laws Governing the Rate of Excretion of Urea and Chlorides in 
Man. 

1916 Clara Jacobson, Physician, 7556 Saginaw Ave., Chicago, 111. 

Studies on the Physiology of the Parathyroid Glands. 

Fred Terry Rogers, Professor of Physiology, Baylor LTniversity Medical 
College, Dallas, Tex. 
The Hunger Mechanism of the Pigeon and Its Relation to the Central 
Nervous System. 

1917 George Emanuel Burget, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Physiology, University of Oregon, Portland, Ore. 
An Attempt to Produce Experimental Thyroid Hyperplasia. 

Maurice Holmes Rees, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Physiology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo. 
The Influence of Pituitary Extract on the Daily Output of Urine. 

George Fred Sutherland, Interne, Presbyterian Hospital, Chicago, 111. 
Studies on Gastric Secretion. 

1918 Andrew Conway Ivy, Assistant Professor of Physiology, Loyola Uni- 

versity, Chicago, 111. 
Studies in Gastric Ulcer. 1. The Occurrence of Ulcer and Other 
Pathological Conditions in the Stomach and Duodenum of the 
Dog. 2. The Experimental Production of Chronic Ulcer. 3. The 
Relation of the Location of the Ulcer to Motility. 4. Is the 
Hypermotility of the Stomach in Duodenal Ulcer of Extrinsic or 
Intrinsic Origin ? 

1919 Emma Anna Kohman (Mrs. A. C. Ivy), 817 S. Springfield Ave., Chicago, 

111. 
The Experimental Production and Control of Hunger Edema. 

1920 Lester Reynold Dragstedt, Assistant Professor of Physiology, Uni- 

versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Studies in Acute Intestinal Obstruction. 

Thomas Leon Patterson, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Physiology, Detroit Med cal College, Detroit, Mich. 
Studies on Gastric Hunger Contractions in Amphidia and Reptilia. 

Bernard Raymund, Instructor in English, Ohio State University, 
Columbus, Ohio. 
Alkali Reserve in Experimental Surgical Shock. 

1921 Ralph Waldo Gerard, Professor of Physiology, University of South 

Dakota, Vermillion, S.D. 
The Presence and Significance of Histomine in an Obstructed Bowel. 

George Addison Talbert, Assistant Professor of Physiology, University 
of Nebraska, Omaha, Neb. 
The Hydrogen Ion Concentration of Human Sweat. The Ash of 
Human Sweat Produced by Heat and Work. 



78 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY AND PHARMACOLOGY 

1906 Hugh McGuigan, Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Uni- 
versity of lUinois Medical School, Chicago, 111. 
Oxidations of Various Sugars in the Animal Body. 
1909 Herbert Horace Bunzel. 

The Mechanism of the Oxidation of Glucose by Bromine. 
1912 Fred Conrad Koch, Associate Professor of Physiological Chemistry and 
Acting Chairman of the Department, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
The Nature of the Iodine Complex in Thyreo-Globulin. 
Shiro Tashiro, Associate Professor of Biochemistry, University of Cincin- 
nati Medical School, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
Chemical Change in Nerve Fiber during Passage of a Nerve Impulse. 
1914 Mary Louise Foster, Professor of Biochemistry, Smith College, North- 
ampton, Mass. 
Studies on a Method for the Quantitative Estimation of Certain 
Groups in Phospholipins. 
1916 Maud Leonora Menten, Assistant Professor of Pathology, University of 
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
Alkalinity of the Blood in Malignant Disease and Other Pathological 
Conditions. 

1918 Lloyd Kendrick Riggs, Chemist, Squibb and Sons, New Brunswick, N.J. 

The Effect of Salts upon the Metabolism of Nerves. 

1919 Esther Maud Greisheimer, Senior Medical Student, University of 

Minnesota, MinneapoUs, Minn. 
A Quantitative Study of the Effects Produced by Salts of Sodium, 
Potassium, Rubidium, and Calcium on Motor Nerve of Frog. 
Karl Konrad Koessler, Associate Professor of Experimental Medicine, 
Otho S. A. Sprague Memorial Institute, Chicago, 111. 
A Michrochemical Colorimetric Method for Estimating Histidine. 
A Quantitative Colorimetric Method for the Separation of Hista- 
mine and Histidine. The Formation of Histamine by the Decarbo- 
xylation of Histadine by Bacillus CoU Communis. 
Howard Martin Sheaff, Presbyterian Hospital. Chicago, 111. 

A Method for the Quantitative Estimation of Minute Amounts of 
Gaseous Oxygen and Its AppUcation to Tissue Respiration. 
Roger John Williams, Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry, 
University of Oregon, Eugene, Ore. 
The Vitamine Requirement of Yeast. A Simple Biological Test for 
Vitamine. 
1921 Harry Benjamin Van Dyke, Cook County Hospital, Chicago, 111. 
A Study of the Distribution of Iodine in the ThjToid Gland. 

BOTANY 

1897 Charles Joseph Chamberlain, Professor of Morphology and Cytology, 

University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Contributions to the Life History of Salix. 

1898 William L. Bray, Professor and Head of the Department of Botany, 

and Dean of Graduate School, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y. 
The Xerophytic Flora of the Texas Plains. 
Otis William Caldwell, Director, Lincoln School of Teachers College, 

Columbia University, New York, _ N.Y. 
Morphology of Lemna, with Ecological Notes. 



BIOLOGICAL GROUP 79 



1898 Henry Chandler Cowles, Professor of Plant Ecology, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
An Ecological Study of the Sand Dune Flora of Northern Indiana. 
William Dayton Merrell, Professor of Biology, University of Rochester, 

Rochester, N.Y. 
Contribution to the Life History of Silphium. 

1899 Nels L. T. Nelson, Associate Professor of Biology, Agricultural and 

Mechanical College of Texas, College Station, Tex. 
Revision of the North American Species of Solanum. 
Robert Wilson Smith, Professor of Botany, McMaster University, 
Toronto, Canada. 
A Contribution to the Life History of Isoetes. 

1900 John Gaylord Coulter, Manager, Chateau Sandricourt, Meru, Oise, 

France. 
A Contribution to the Life History of Sium. 
Frank Lincoln Stevens, Professor of Plant Pathology, University of 
lUinois, Urbana, 111. 
The Compound Oosphere of Albugo BUti. 

1901 Anstruther Abercrombie Lawson, Professor of Botany, University of 

Sydney, Australia. 
Studies on the Morphology of the Nucleus. 
Burton Edward Livingston, Professor of Plant Physiology, Johns 
Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. ; permanent secretary, Ameri- 
can Association for the Advancement of Science. 
The Development of the Profile of Equilibrium of the Subaqueous 
Shore Terrace. 
Florence May Lyon (Mrs. Strong Vincent Norton), Birmingham, Mich. 
The Development of the Sporangium and Gametophyte of Selaginella 
rupestris. 
James Bertram Overton, Professor of Plant Physiology and Chairman 
of the Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 
Wis. 
Parthogenesis in ThaUctrum purpurascens. 

1902 Theodore Christian Frye, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Botany, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 
Fertilization and Attendant Phenomena in Asclepias and Acerates. 

1903 tJoHN Frederick Garber. 

The Life History of Ricciocarpus natans. 
George Mellinger Holferty, Central High School, St. Louis, Mo. 

The Development and Phylogeny of the Archegonium of Bryum 
proliferum. 
Harry Nicholas Whitford, Assistant Professor of Tropical Forestry, 
Yale University, New Haven, Conn. 
The Ecological Relations of the Coniferous Forests of the Flathead 
Valley, Mont. 

1904 Mintin Asbury Chrysler, Professor of Biology, University of Maine, 

Orono, Me. 
The Development of the Central Cylinder in Araceae and Liliaceae. 
Clifton Durant Howe, Dean and Professor of Forestry, University of 
Toronto, Toronto, Canada. 
Reforestation on the Colchester-Essex Sand Plains. 
William Jesse Goad Land, Associate Professor of Morphology, Uni- 
versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
A Morphological Study of Thuja. 



tDeceased. 



80 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1904 William Burnet McCalltjm, Chief Botanist, International Rubber Co., 

Continental, Ariz. 
Regeneration and Polarity in Plants. 
George Harrison Shull, Professor of Botany and Genetics, Princeton 
University, Princeton, N.J. 
A Second Contribution to the Establishment of Place-Constants for 
Aster prenanthoides Muhl at Clifton, Ohio. 
Laetitia Morris Snow, Associate Professor of Botany, Wellesley College, 
Wellesley, Mass. 
The Effects of External Agents on the Production of Root-hairs. 
Robert Bradford Wylie, Professor of Plant Morphology and Head of 
the Department of Botany, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
The Morphology of Elodea canadensis. 

1905 Heinrich Hasselbring, Plant Physiologist, Bureau of Plant Industry, 

Washington, D.C. 

Certain Problems of Assimilation. 
Etoile Bessie Simons, In charge. Employment and Welfare Depart- 
ments, Fred Harvey System, Chicago, 111. 

A Morphological Study of Sargassum filipendula. 

1906 William Crocker, Director, Thompson Institute for Plant Research, 

Yonkers, N.Y. 
The Role of Seed in Delayed Germination. 
Hemming Gerhard Jensen, 815 Linden Avenue, Pullman, Wash. 

Toxic Limits and Stimulation Effects of Some Salts and Poisons 
on Wheat. 
Frances Grace Smith, Associate Professor of Botany, Smith College, 
Northampton, Mass. 
Morphology of the Trunk and Development of the Microsporangum 
of Cycads. 

1907 LuLA Pace, Professor of Botany, Baylor University, Waco, Texas. 

Fertilization in Cypripedium. 
Reinhardt Thiessen, Chemist and Microscopist, U.S. Bureau of Mines, 
Pittsburgh, Pa. 
The Vascular Anatomy of the Seedling of Dioon. 
Shigeo Yamanouchi, Professor of Botany, Tokyo Higher Normal College, 
Tokyo, Japan. 
A Study of Apogamy. 

1908 Leonas Lancelot Burlingame, Associate Professor of Botany, Stanford 

University, Cal. 
Staminate Cone of Podocarpus. 
Reginald Ruggles Gates, Professor of Botany, University of London, 
King's College, London. 
A Study of Reduction in Oenothera Rubrinerois. 
LeRoy Harris Harvey, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Biology, Western Normal School, Kalamazoo, Mich. 
The Prairie Grass Formation of Southeastern South Dakota. 
Wanda May Pfeiffer (Mrs. Arthur G. Vestal), 301 Pope St., Palo 
Alto, Cal. 
The Morphology of Leitneria Floridana. 
Charles Houston Shattuck, Secretary-Treasurer, Eastern Idaho Loan 
and Trust Co., Idaho Falls, Idaho. 
Origin of Heterospery in Marsiha. 
Alma Gracey Stokey, Professor of Botany, Mount Holyoke College, 
South Hadley, Mass. 
The Anatomy of Isoetes. 



BIOLOGICAL GROUP 81 



1909 Sister Helen Angela Dorety, Professor of Botany, St. Elizabeth 

College, Convent Station, N.J. 
Anatomy of the Seedling of Ceratozamia. 

Nielsine Johanna KitoAHL, 3336 Longfellow Avenue, Minneapolis, 
Minn. 
The Morphology of Phyllocladus. 
Edith Minot Twiss, Associate Professor of Botany, Vassar College, 
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 
Prothallia of Aneimia and Lygodium. 

1910 Charles Orval Appleman, Professor of Plant Physiology, University 

of Maryland, Baltimore, Md. 
Some Observations on Catalase. 

Grace Miriam Charles, Assistant Professor of Botany, University of 
Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. 
The Anatomy of the Sporeling of Marattia alata. 
tMARY Sophie Young. 

Morphology of the Podocarpineae. 

1911 Grace Lucretia Clapp, Head of the Department of Botany, Milwaukee- 

Downer College, Milwaukee, Wis. 
The Life History of Aneura pinguis. 
William Skinner Cooper, Assistant Professor of Plant Physiology and 
Ecology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 
The Chmax Forest of Isle Royale, Lake Superior. 
Sophia Hennion Eckerson, Research Assistant, Thompson Institute for 
Plant Research, Yonkers, N.Y. 
A Physiological and Chemical Study of After-Ripening. 
Anna Morse Starr, Associate Professor of Botany, Mount Holyoke 
College, South Hadley, Mass. 
Comparative Anatomy of Dune Plants. 

1912 Melvin Amos Brannon, President, Beloit College, Beloit, Wis. 

The Action of Salton Sea Water on Plant Tissues. 
Laura Campbell Gano (Mrs. Jerome McNeill), Lake Thanotassee, Fla. 

The Physiographic Ecology of Northern Florida. 
Stella Mary Hague, Instructor in Botany, University of Illinois, 
Urbana, 111. 
A Morphological Study of Diospyros virginiana. 
Ansel Francis Hemenway, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Biology, Transylvania College, Lexington, Ky. 
The Phloem of Dicotyledons. 
Lester Whyland Sharp, Professor of Botany, Cornell University, 
Ithaca, N.Y. 
Spermatogenesis in Equisetum. 

1913 WiNFRED McKenzie Atwood, Associate Professor of Botany, State 

Agricultural College, Corvallis, Ore. 
A Physiological Study of the Germination of Avena fatua. 
George Damon Fuller, Assistant Professor of Ecology, University of 
Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Evaporation and Soil Moisture in Relation to the Succession of 
Plant Associations. 
John Benjamin Hill, Professor of Botany, State College of Pennsylvania, 
State College, Pa. 
The Anatomy of Six Epiphytic Species of Lycopodium. 



t Deceased. 



82 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1913 Lee Irving Knight, Professor of Plant Physiology and Chairman of the 

Department of Botany, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 
Minn. 
A Study of the Dormancy in Buds of Liriodendron Tulipifera. 
John Nathan Martin, Professor of Botany, Iowa State College, Ames, 
Iowa. 
Comparative Morphology of Some Leguminosae. 
LoREN Clifford Petry, Associate Professor of Botany, Syracuse Uni- 
versity, Syracuse, N.Y. 
The Anatomy of Ophioglossum pendulum. 
Norma Etta Pfeiffer, Assistant Professor of Botany, University of 
North Dakota, Grand Forks, N.D. 
Morphology of Thismia (Bagnisia) americana, n. sp. 

1914 Hannah Caroline Aase, Assistant Professor of Botany, State College, 

Pullman, Wash. 
Vascular Anatomy of the " Megasporophyll " in Conifers. 
George Smith Bryan, Assistant Professor of Botany, University of Wis- 
consin, Madison, Wis. 
The Archegonium of Sphagnum subsecundum. 
Joseph Stuart Caldwell, Physiologist, Bureau of Plant Industry, 
Washington, D.C. 
A Study of the Effects of Certain Antagonistic Solutions upon the 
Growth of Zea Mays. 
Edward Maris Harvey, Research Horticulturist, Oregon Experiment 
Station, Corvallis, Ore. 
Some Effects of Ethylene on the Metabolism of Plants. 
Florence Anna McCormick, Investigator, Connecticut Agricultural 
Experiment Station, New Haven, Conn. 
A Study of Symphyog5Tia aspera. 
George Burton Rigg, Associate Professor of Botany, University of 
Washington, Seattle, Wash. 
Decay and Soil Toxins. 
Eva Ormenta Schley, McKinley High School, Chicago, 111. 

Physical and Chemical Changes Involved in Geo-presentation 
and Geo-reaction. 
James Palm Stober, Myerstown, Pa. 

A Comparative Study of Winter and Summer Leaves of Various 
Herbs. 

1915 Hermann Bacher Deutsch, New Orleans Item, New Orleans, La. 

Effect of Light upon the Germination of the Spores of the True Ferns. 
Sarah Lucinda Doubt, Acting Professor of Botany, Washburn College, 
Topeka, Kan. 
Response of Plants to Illuminating Gas. 
James Frederick Groves, Professor of Biology, Ripon College, Ripon, 
Wis. 
Life Duration of Seeds. 
Rachel Emille Hoffstadt, Johns Hopkins Medical School, Baltimore, 
Md. 
The Vascular Anatomy of Piper methysticum. 
Andrew Henderson Hutchinson, Professor and Head of the Depart- 
ment of Botany, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. 
Fertilization in Abies balsamea. 
Millard S. Markle, Professor of Biology, Earlham College, Richmond, 
Ind. 
The Root Systems of Certain Desert Plants. 



BIOLOGICAL GROUP 83 



1915 Mabel Lewis Roe, Union High School, Anaheim, Cal. 

The Development of the Conceptacle in Fucus. 
Charles Albert Shull, Associate Professor of Plant Physiology, Uni- 
versity of Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Measurement of the Surface Forces of Soils. 
Arthur Gibson Vestal, Assistant Professor of Biology, Stanford Uni- 
versity, Cal. 
The Phytogeography of the Eastern Mountain -Front in Colorado. 

1916 Frank Earl Denny, Associate Chemist, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 

Los Angeles, Cal. 
Permeability of Certain Plant Membranes to Water. 
Alphaeus William Dupler, Registrar and Professor of Biology, Juniata 
College, Huntingdon, Pa. 
The Gametophytes of Taxus canadensis Marsh. 
Wright Austin Gardner, Professor of Botany, Alabama Polytechnic 
Institute, Auburn, Ala. 
The Effect of Light on the Germination of Seeds. 
Leslie Alva Kenoyer, Professor of Biology, Ewing Christian College, 
Alahabad, India. 
Environmental Influences of Nectar Secretion. 
George Konrad Karl Link, Pathologist, Department of Agriculture, 
Bureau of Markets, Chicago, 111. 
A Physiological Study of Fusarium in Relation to Potato Disease. 
Edith Adelaide Roberts, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Botany, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 
The Epidermal Cells of Roots. 
Earl Edward Sherff, Robert Lindblom High School, Chicago, 111. 
Studies in the Genus Bidens. 

1917 Arthur Lawrence Bakke, Associate Professor of Plant Physiology, 

Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa. 
Studies upon the Determination of Wilting by the Use of Standardized 
Hygrometric Paper. 
John Theodore Buchholz, Professor and Head of the Department of 
Botany, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. 
The Suspensor and Early Embryo of Pinus. 
Harold Dudley Clayberg, Professor of Biology, College of St. Thomas, 
St. Paul, Minn. 
Physiographic Ecology of Walloon Lake, Petoskey Region. 
Winfield Scott Dudgeon, Professor of Botany, Ewing Christian College, 
Allahabad, India. 
The Morphology of Rumex crispus. 
Ezra Jacob Kraus, Research Professor of Applied Botany, University of 
Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 
Vegetation and Reproduction, with Special Reference to the Tomato 
(Physiological and Horticultural Aspects). 
Henry Reist Kraybill, Professor and Head of Agricultural Chemistry, 
New Hampshire Agricultural College, Diu-ham, N.H. 
Vegetation and Reproduction, with Special Reference to the Tomato 
(Chemical Aspects). 
Wilfred William Robbins, Botanist, Office of Cereal Investigation, 
State Capitol Annex, Madison, Wis. 
Successions of Vegetation in Boulder Park, Colorado. 
Dean Humboldt Rose, Pathologist, Department of Agriculture, Bureau 
of Markets, Chicago, 111. 
Oxidase Activity and Chemical Composition of Healthy and Diseased 
Apple Bark. 



84 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1917 Rial Catlin Rose, Inspection Service, Bureau of Markets, Cincinnati, 

Ohio. 
Conditions and Microchemistry of Germination of the Seeds of 
TiUa, Sambucus, and Rubus. 
Mandayam a. Sampathkumakan, Professor of Botany, Central College, 
Bangalore, South India. 
Stelar Cambium and Its Derivatives. 
Homer Cleveland Sampson, Assistant Professor of Botany, Ohio State 
University, Columbus, Ohio. 
Chemical Changes Accompanying Abscission in Coleus Blumei. 
Warren Gookin Waterman, Assistant Professor of Botany, North- 
western University, Evanston, 111. 
The Development of Root Systems under Dune Conditions. 
Bertram Whittier Wells, Professor of Botany, North Carolina College 
of Agriculture, Raleigh, N.C. 
A Survey of the Zoocecidia of Northeastern United States and 
Eastern Canada. 

1918 James Elias Cribbs, Professor of Biology, Drury College, Springfield, Mo. 

A Cornparative Study of the Foliar Transpiring Power of Tiha 
americana. 
Arthur Thompson Evans, Associate Agronomist, South Dakota State 
College, Brookings, S.D. 
The Embryo-Sac and Embryo of Pentstemon secundiflorus Benth. 
Rodney Beecher Harvey, Associate Professor of Plant Physiology, 
University of Minnesota, University Farm, St. Paul, Minn. 
The Hardening Process in Plants and the Developments from Frost 
Injury. 

Henry Albert Jones, Professor of Vegetable Gardening, University of 
Maryland, College Park, Md. 
Studies on the Seeds of the River Maple (Acer saccharinum L.) and 
the Sugar Maple (Acer saccarum Marsh). 

Thomas Guthrie Phillips, Assistant Professor of Agricultural Chemistry, 
Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. 
Physical and Chemical Changes during Geotropic Response. 
Frank Milton Schertz, Biochemist, Bureau of Plant Industry, Wash- 
ington, D.C. 
Chemical Studies on the Relation of Nitrogen to Mottling in Coleus. 
Harlow Leslie Walster, Agronomist and Chairman of the Department 
of Agronomy, Experiment Station, Agricultural College, N.D. 
The Formative Effects of High Temperature upon the Growth of 
Barley. 

Wanda Weniger, Plant Pathologist, Experiment Station, Agricultural 
College, N.D. 
FertiUzation in Lilium. 

1919 Merle Crowe Coulter, Assistant Professor of Botany, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Inheritance of Endosperm Characters in Corn. 
Arthur Wing Haupt, Professor of Biology, St. Lawrence Universitv, 
Canton, N.Y. . . 

The Life History of Fossombronia cristula. 
LaDema Mary Langdon, Instructor in Biology, Goucher College, 
Baltimore, Md. 
The Stem Anatomy of Dioon spinulosum. 
Aravilla Meek Taylor, Assistant Professor of Biology, Sophie New- 
comb College, Tulane University, New Orleans, La. 
Ecological Succession of Mosses. 



BIOLOGICAL GROUP 85 

1919 John James Willaman, Assistant Professor of Agricultural Biochemistry, 

University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minn. 
The Function of Vitamine in the Metabolism of Sclerotinia cinerea. 

1920 Helen Ashhurst Choate, Assistant Professor of Botany, Smith College, 

Northampton, Mass. 
A Study of Certain Chemical Changes Occurring in Wheat during 
Germination. 

Scott Verne Eaton, Instructor in Botany, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111. 
Sulphur Content of Soils and Its Relation to Plant Nutrition. 
Howard deForest, Head of the Department of Science, Indianapolis 
Normal School, Indianapolis, Ind. 
The Plant Ecology of the Rock River Woodlands of Ogle County, 
IlUnois. 
Dean Alvin Pack, Sugar Plant Investigations, Department of Agri- 
culture, Salt Lake City, Utah. 
After-Ripening and Germination of Juniper Seeds. 
Hope Sherman, 605 Jackson Street, Milwaukee, Wis. 

The Respiration of Dormant Seeds. 
Perry Daniel Strausbaugh, Professor of Botany, Wooster College, 
Wooster, Ohio. 
A Study of Dormancy in the Plum. 

1921 Hugo Leander Blomquist, Assistant Professor of Biology, Trinity 

College, Durham, N.C. 
A Contribution to the Study of the Vascular Anatomy of Angiopteria 

evecta. 
Fred Wilbert Emerson, Professor and Head of the Department of 

Biology, Penn College, Oskaloosa, Iowa. 
The Subterranean Organs of Bog Plants. 

PATHOLOGY 

1903 Harry Gideon Wells, Professor of Pathology, University of Chicago, 
Chicago, 111.; Director of the Otho S. A. Sprague Memorial 
Institute. 
Studies in Fat Necrosis. 
1905 David John Davis, Professor and Head of the Department of Pathology 
and Bacteriology, University of Illinois College of Medicine, 
Chicago, 111. 
Bacteriology of Whooping Cough. 

1907 GusTAV Ferdinand Ruediger, Director of Laboratory, Los Angeles, 

Cal. 
Mechanism of Natural and Acquired Streptococcus Immunity. 

1908 LiBORio Gomez y Pineda, Chief of Biological Division, Bureau of Science, 

Manila, P.I. 
Studies in Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. 

1910 Benjamin Franklin Davis, Chief of Surgery, Academy of CHnical 

Medicine, Duluth, Minn. 
The Immunological Reactions of Oidiomycosis (Blastomycosis) in 
the Guinea Pig. 

1911 Harry John Corper, Director of Laboratories of the National Jewish 

Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo. 

The Chemistry of the Spleen under Normal and Pathological Condi- 
tions. 
Eugene Franklin McCampbell, Dean and Professor of Preventive 
Medicine, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. 

Toxic and Antigenic Properties of B. welchii. 



86 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 

1911 Russell Morse Wilder, Physician, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. 
The Problem of Transmission in Typhus Fever. 

1913 Aaron Arkin, Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology, Medical School, 

University of West Virginia, Morgantown, W.Va. 
The Influence of Chemical Substances on Immune Reactions. 
fGEORGE Lester Kite. 

Studies on the Permeability of the Internal Cytoplasm of Animal and 
Plant Cells. 

1914 Edwin Frederick Hirsch, Director of Laboratories, St. Luke's Hospital, 

Chicago, 111. 
An Experimental Study of the Influence of lodin and lodids on the 
Absorption of Granulation Tissue and Fat-free Tubercle Bacilli. 

1915 Julian Herman Lewis, Associate Member of the Otho S. A. Sprague 

Memorial Institute, Chicago, 111. 
The Inhibitory Action of Heterologous Mixtures on Anaphylaxis. 

1916 Oscar Jacob Elsesser, Pathologist and Director of Chemical Laboratory, 

Freeport, 111. 
The Specificity of the Abderhalden Reaction. 

1917 Harry Lee Huber, Assistant Member of the Otho S. A. Sprague Memorial 

Institute, Chicago, 111. 
The Pharmacology and Toxicology of Copper Salts of Amino Acids. 

1918 George Thomas Caldwell, Professor of Pathology, Baylor University, 

Medical College, Dallas, Tex. 
Chemical Changes in Tuberculous Tissues. 
Emanuel Bernard Fink, Resident, Cook County Hospital, Chicago, 111. 

Antigentic Properties of Proteoses. 
Gleason Chandler Lake, United States Public Health Service, Wash- 
ington, D.C. 
Immune Reactions of Proteins of Human Placenta. 

1919 Esmond Ray Long, Assistant Professor of Pathology, University of 

Chicago, Chicago, 111. 
Some Phases of Normal and Abnormal Purine Metabolism in Man 
and Domestic Animals. 

HYGIENE AND BACTERIOLOGY 

1900 fHowELL Emlyn Davies. 

The Occurrence of the Typhoid Bacillus in the Urine of Typhoid 
Fever Patients. 
1903 Mary Hefferan, Vice-President and Director, D. A. Blodgett Home 
for Children, Grand Rapids, Mich. 
A Comparative and Experimental Study of BacilU Producing Red 
Pigment. 

1907 Paul Gustav Heineman, Director of Laboratories, United States Standard 

Products Co., Woodworth, Wis. 
The Kinds of Bacteria Concerned in the Souring of Milk. 

1908 Robert Earle Buchanan, Dean of Division of Industrial Science, Pro- 

fessor of Bacteriology and Hygiene, and Bacteriologist of the Iowa 
Agricultural Experiment Station, Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa. 
The Morphology of Bacillus Radicicola. 
fHERBERT Marcus Goodman. 

Experimental Studies on Diphtheric Immunity. 
1910 Thomas Haigh Glenn, Physician, Los Angeles, Cal. 

Variation and Carbohydrate MetaboUsm of Bacilli of the Proteus 
Group. 

t Deceased. 



BIOLOGICAL GROUP 87 

1912 Ernest Edward Irons, Associate Professor of Medicine, Rush Medical 
College, Chicago, 111. 
Cutaneous Allergy in Gonococcal Infections. 

1916 William Ernest Cary, Physician, 104 South Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. 

Studies on Virulence and Toxin Formation in B. diphtheriae. 
Emery Roe Hayhurst, Professor of Hygiene and Head of the Depart- 
ment of Public Health, Ohio State llniversity, Columbus, Ohio. 
Industrial Health-hazards and Occupational Diseases in Ohio. 

1917 Enrique Eduardo Ecker, Instructor in Immunology, Western Reserve 

University, and Assistant Visiting Immunologist to the Lakeside 
Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. 
The Pathogenic Effect and Nature of a Toxin Produced by B. para- 
typhosus B. 

1918 Walter George Sackett, Bacteriologist, Colorado Agricultural Experi- 

ment Station, Fort ColHns, Colo. 
The Connection of Milk Sickness with the Poisonous Qualities 
of White Snakeroot (Eupatorium Urticaefolium). 

1919 Ida Albertina Bengtson, Bacteriologist, Hygienic Laboratory, United 

States Public Health Service, Washington, D.C. 
The Proteus Group of Organisms with Special Reference to Agglutina- 
tion and Fermentation Reactions and to Classification. 
Benjamin Junior Clawson, Assistant Professor of Pathology, University 
of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minn. 
Varieties of Streptococci with Special Reference to Constancy. 
Frederick William Mulsow, Assistant Professor of Bacteriology and 
Pathology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. 
A Comparative Study of Bacillus puUorum and Bacillus sanguinarium. 

1920 Bernard Wernick Hammer, Professor of Dairy Bacteriology, Iowa 

State College, Ames, Iowa. 
The Volatile Acid Production of S. Lacticus and the Organisms 
Associated with It in Starters. 

1921 Paul Roberts Cannon, Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology, Uni- 

versity of Mississippi Medical School, University, Miss. 
The Effects of Diet upon the Intestinal Flora. 
John Everett Gordon, Associate Professor of Bacteriology, Western 

University Medical School, London, Ontario. 
1. The Relationship of the Pneumococcus to Acute Infections of the 

Upper Respiratory Tract in Man. 2. The Gram Negative Cocci 

in "Colds" and Influenza. 
Ivan Clifford Hall, Associate Professor of Bacteriology, University 

of CaUfornia, Berkeley, Cal. 
Studies in Anaerobes. 



NUMERICAL SUMMARY 
Social Science Group: 

Philosophy 53 

Psychology 46 

Education 38 

Political Economy 41 

Political Science 15 

History 60 

Sociology and Anthropology 52 

History of Art 1 

Household Administration 3 

Home Economics (Food Chemistry) 1 

Comparative Religion 3 

Divinity School Group: 

Oriental Languages and Literatures . 44 

New Testament Literature and Interpretation 37 

Systematic Theology 22 

Church History 12 

Religious Education 9 

Sociology 5 

Classical Group: 

Greek Language and Literature 46 

Latin Language and Literature 37 

Comparative Philology 12 

Modern Language Group : 

Romance Languages and Literatures 27 

Germanic Languages and Literatures 51 

English Language and Literature 57 

Mathematics and Physical Science Group: 

Mathematics 94 

Mathematical Astronomy 11 

Practical Astronomy and Astrophysics 9 

Physics 67 

Chemistry 148 

Earth Science Group: 

Geology and Paleontology 57 

Geography 8 



313 



129 



95 



135 



329 



65 



Biological Group: 

Zoology 60 

Anatomy 18 

Physiology 39 

Physiological Chemistry and Pharmacology 12 

Botany 118 

Pathology 18 

Hygiene and Bacteriology 18 283 



Total : 1 ,349 

Deceased 52 

Living Doctors 1 , 297 



INDEX OF NAMES 



Aase, Hanna C, 82 

Abbott, Edith, 13 

Abbott, Edwina E., (Mrs. 
Austin M. Cowan), 9 

Abbott, J. F., 72 

Acree, S. F., 57 

Adams, C. C, 72 

Adams, Elizabeth K., 6 

Adams, H. S., 60 

Adams, H. P., 8 

Adams, M., 57 

Adams, R. C, 20 

Albright, Evelyn M., 43 

Alden, W. C, 67 

Alexis, J., 41 

AUee, W. C, 73 

Allen, B. M., 72 

Allen, C. E., 34 

Allen, H. F., 26 

Allen, Jessie B. (Mrs. W. 
W. Charters), 8 

Allen, P. S., 38 

Allen, T. G., 25 

Allison, W. H., 29 

Allyn, Harriett M., 73 

Almstedt, H. B., 39 

Ames, E. S., 5 

Anderson, D. R., 17 

Anderson, E., 59 

Appleman, C. O., 81 

Appleton, Lilla E., 11 

Arbuthnot, C. C, 13 

Arkin, A., 86 

Arlitt, Ada H., 9 

Arnold, H. D., 54 

Arnold, J. K., 23 
tArnoldson, T. W., 40 

Aaronberg, L., 62 
tAsada, E., 23 

Ashley, M. L.. 5 

Ashman, G. C, 59 

Attig, C. J., 19 

Atwood, W. W., 67 

Atwood, Winfred M., 81 

Axtell, H. L., 34 

Ayer, F. C, 11 

Ayres, C. E., 7 

Babcock, E. B., 38 
Bacon, R. P., 58 
Bailey, J. W., 26 
Bailey, P., 75 
Bain, H. P., 67 
Baird, P. C, 23 
Baker, A. G.. 28 
Baker, R. P.. 47 



Bakke, A. L.. 83 

Balch, E. A., 16 

Baldwin. J. P., 16 

Barber, I. G., 56 
tBarnard, Edith E., 58 

Barnes, J. C, 9 

Bamett, I. A.. 50 

Barrows, D. P., 19 

Barta, A., 23 

Bartelmez, G. W., 73 

Basinger, H. R., 77 

Baskervill, C. R., 42 

Baskett, W. D., 41 

Basterfleld, S., 64 

Bastin, E. S., 68 

Bates, W. H., 47 

Batt, M., 39 

Baumgartner, M. D., 40 

Bawden, H. H., 5 

Beardslee, J. W., 32 

Beatty, W. A., 57 

Becht, P. C, 76 

Bechtel, E. A., 33 

Becker, Henrietta K. (Mrs. 
Camillo von Klenze), 39 

Beckmann, P. E.. 37 

Beers, Ethel E., 32 

Begeman, L., 53 

Behan, W. P., 29 

Behre, Ellinor H., 74 

Bellamy, A. W., 74 

Bengtson, Ida A., 87 

Bennett, H., 35 

Bernard, L. L., 20 

Bernhard, A. H., 56 

Bernstorflf, F. A., 40 

Berry. G. R., 23 

Bevan, A. C, 70 

Beziat, A., 37 

Biddle, H. C, 57 

Billings, T. H., 32 

BilUngs, Mrs. T. H. (Grace 
Hadley), 32 

Bingham, W. V., 8 

Birkhoflf, G. D., 46 
tBLshop, E. S.. 54 

Bishop, P. L.. 53 

Blachley, C. D., 21 

Blackwelder, E., 68 

Blackwood, O., 56 

Blair, W. R., 63 

BUss. G. A., 45 

Blomquist, H. L., 85 

Bloomfleld, L., 39 

Blount, Mary, 73 

Blunt, Katharine. 58 

89 



Boardman, R. N., 7 
Bodenhafer. W. B., 21 
Bogardus, E. S., 20 
tBondurant, B. C, 34 
Bonner, R. J., 31 
Bonnett, C. E., 14 
Booth. Bertha E.. 35 
Borger. R. L.. 46 
Bowen, Mary (Mrs. W. H. 

Brainerd), 41 
tBoyce, Helen, 19 
Brannon, M. A., 81 
Branson, E. B., 67 
Braunlich, Alice P.. 35 
Bray, W. L., 78 
Breckinridge, Sophonisba 

P., 15 
Breitenbecher, J. K., 73 
Bretz, J H, 68 
Bretz, J. P., 17 
Brewster, R. Q., 63 
Breyfogle, Caroline M., 24 
Bridgman, D. E., 14 
Bristol, C. L., 71 
Erode, H. S., 71 
Brokaw, A. D.. 68 
Bronk. Isabelle, 37 
tBrookover, C, 75 
Brooks, C. R.. 76 
Brooks, T. D., 12 
Brotherton, Blanche E., 35 
Brown, D. J., 62 
Brown, P. C, 42 
Brown, P. E.. 63 
Brown, G. L., 45 
Brown, Hazel L., 32 
Brown. O. H.. 76 
Brown, R. L., 62 
Brownlee, R. H., 58 
Bruce, P. P., 24 
Bruce, W. M., 58 
Brush, H. R., 37 
Bryan, G. S., 82 
Bryan, W. P.. 43 
Buchanan, D. 51 
Buchanan, H. E., 51 
Buchanan, J. W., 74 
Buchanan, M. A., 37 
Buchanan, R. E., 86 
Buchholz, .T. T.. 83 
Buck. T.. 47 
Buckley. E., 22 
Bunting, E. N., 63 
Bunzell, H. H.. 78 
tBurchard, H. M., 31 
Burgess, E. W., 20 



90 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



Burgess. T. C, 31 
Burget, G. E., 77 
Burkhard, O. C, 41 
Burlingame, L. L., 80 
Burroughs, G. V., 18 
Burruss, J. A., 12 
Burwash, E. M. J., 69 
Bushnell, C. J., 19 
Bussey, W. H., 46 
Buswell. G. T.. 12 

Cadwell, S. M., 62 

Cady, G. H., 69 

Caldwell, G. T., 86 

Caldwell, J. S.. 82 

Caldwell, O. W., 78 
tCaldwell, W., 24 

Calhoun, F. H. H., 67 

Calhoun, G. M., 32 

Campbell, C. B., 40 

Campbell. J. W., 51 

Campbell, Lily B., 44 

Cannon. P. R.. 87 

Capps, S. R., 68 

Carman, J. E., 69 

Carpenter. A. F., 48 

Carpenter, C. D., 61 
. Carpenter. F. I., 41 

Carr, Emma P., 59 

Carr, H., 8 

Carre, H. B., 27 

Carroll, Mollie R., 21 

Carson, C. M., 58 

Cartledge, G. H., 61 

Cams, E. H., 50 

Cary, W. E., 87 

Case, C. D., 27 

Case, E. C. 67 

Castro, Matilde, 6 
tCatterall, R. C. H., 17 

ChamberUn, C. J., 78 

Chamberlin, Ethel M. 
(Mrs. G. Q. Porter), 9 

Chamberlain, R. T., 68 

Chamberlain, W. A., 40 

Chandler, E. E., 59 

Chaney, R.. W., 69 

Charles, Grace M., 81 

Charters, W. W., 6 

Cheng, Y. C, 64 

Chittenden, E. W., 47 

Choate, Helen A., 85 

Chrysler, M. A., 79 

Cipriani, Lisi C, 37 
tClaassen. P. A., 39 

Clapp, Cornelia M., 71 

Clapp, Grace L., 81 

Clark, E., 75 

Clark, F. W., 35 

Clark, G. L., 63 



Clark, Hannah B. (Mrs. 

A. V. Powell), 19 
tClark, W. A., 10 
Clawson, B., Jr., 87 
Clay berg, H. D., 83 
Claypole, Agnes M. (Mrs. 

R. O. Moody), 71 
Clement, J. A., 11 
Clemente, A., 64 
Cleveland, Catharine C, 18 
Clifford, O. C, 53 
Clo. J. H., 53 
Coffin, P. J., 23 
Coflfman, Bertha R. (Mrs. 

G. R.), 40 
Coffman, G. R., 43 
Cohn, E. J., 74 
Colby, C. C, 70 
Coleman, C, 61 
Colman, G. T., 7 
Comparette, T., 33 
Conant, C. E., 36 
Conrad, C. C, 35 
Cooke, A. W., 28 
Cooke, EUzabeth, 75 
Cooke, H. C, 68 
Coon, R. H., 35 
Cooper, C. B., 42 
Cooper, W. S., 81 
Copeland, Edith A., 7 
Copeland, M. A., 15 
Corper, H. J., 85 
Corwin, Rebecca, 24 
Coryell, H. N., 70 
Coulter, J. G., 79 
Coulter, M. C, 84 
Counts, G. S.. 11 
Cowdry, E. V., 75 
Cowles, H. C, 79 
Cowper, P. A. G., 38 
Cox, H. L., 64 
Crabb, W. D., 37 
Craig, W., 73 
Crandall, Regina K., 17 
Crane, Esther, 7 
Crawford, J. P., 6 
Cresse, G. H., 50 
Cressey, P. G., 30 
Cribbs, J. E., 84 
Crocker, W., 80 
Crosby, Elizabeth C, 75 
Cross, G., 27 
Crowley, W. A., 7 
Cummings, J., 13 
Cunningham, H. E., 7 
Curme, G. O., Jr., 60 

Dains, P. B., 67 

Daniels, Margaret (Mrs. 

Solon De Leon), 7 
Darrow, K. K., 55 



Davenport, Prances G., 17 

Davenport, H. J., 13 

Davies, E. C. H., 62 
tDavies, H. E., 86 

Davis, B. P., 85 

Davis, D. J., 85 

Davis, Katharine B., 13 
tDay, Edna D. (Mrs. A. L. 
Hyde), 22 

De Beukelaer, P. L., 64 

Decker, C. E., 69 

De Forest, H., 85 

De Moss, W. P., 44 

Dempster, A. J., 54 

Denis, W., 58 

Denny, P. E., 83 

Denton, Minna C, 22 

Derby, I. H., 59 

Derieux, J. B., 55 

De Sale, Adeline M. (Mrs. 
G. K. K. Link), 62 

Deutsch, H. B., 82 

Dewey, M. H., 41 

DeWitt, N. W., 34 

Dickson, L. B., 45 

Dignan, P. W., 31 

Dines, C. R., 48 

Dines, L. L., 46 

Dodd, W. P.. 15 

Donald, W. J. A., 14 

Dopp, Katherine E., 10 

Dorety, Sister Helen A., 81 

Doubt, Sarah L., 82 

Doubt, T. E., 52 
tDouthitt, H., 69 

Downey, June E., 8 

Downing, E. R., 71 

Dragstedt, L. R., 77 

Dresden, A., 47 

Dudgeon, W. S., 83 

Duncan, C. S., 43 

Dungay, N. S., 73 

Dupler, A. W., 83 

Dutton, Emily H.. 32 

Dyer, G. W., 20 

Earhart, R. P., 52 

Eaton, Rachel C, 18 

Eaton, S. v., 85 

Ecker, E. B., 87 

Bckerson, Sophia H., 81 

Edwards, L. P., 29 

Eggert. C. E., 39 

Eichelberger, Lillian V., 65 
fBlliott, R. D., 33 

ElUson, L. M., 43 

EUwood, C. A., 19 

Elmer, M. C, 21 

Elsesser, O. J., 86 
tBmerson, P. V., 70 

Emerson, P. W., 85 



INDEX OF NAMES 



91 



Emmons. W. H.. 67 
Enteman, Wilhelmine M. 

(Mrs. F. B. Key), 72 
Erb, F. O.. 29 
Ericksen, E. E., 7 
Eskridge, J. B., 34 
Espinosa, A. M., 37 
Eubank, E. E.. 21 
Evans, A. T., 84 
tEvans, E. C, 15 
Evans, H. P., 29 
Evans, L. B., 15 
Evans, W. L., 58 
Ewing, D. T., 64 
Ewing. W. W., 64 
Eycleshymer, A. C, 71 

Faris, E., 9 
Farley, A. A., 11 
Farnsworth, Alice H., 52 
Fay, Agnes L. (Mrs. A. I. 

Morgan), 59 
Feldman, A., 65 
Fenneman, N. M., 67 
Fenton, Frances (Mrs. L. L. 

Bernard), 20 
Ferguson, W. D., 26 
Femald, Grace M., 8 
Fernald, Mabel R., 8 
Fertig, J. W., 16 
Findlay, "W., 45 
Fink, E. B., 86 
Finkelstein, L., 65 
Fischer, C. A., 48 
Fleming, D. J., 30 
Fleming, H. E., 20 
Fletcher, H., 54 
FUckinger, R. C, 31 
Folin, O. K. O., 57 
Forrest, J. D., 19 
Fors, A. P., 22 
Fortune, A. W., 27 
Foster, Mary L., 78 
Fowler, E. B., 44 
Fowler, F. H., 35 
France, Wilmer C. (Mrs. 

J. E. Wright), 31 
Frank, T., 34 
Franklin, F. G., 16 
Freas, T. B., 60 
Frisbie, Fannie C. (Mrs. 

F. B. Jewett), 53 
Frotscher, Lydia E., 41 
Frye, T. C, 79 
Fukuya, S. M., 9 
Puller, G. D., 81 

Gaba, M. G., 47 
Gabbert, M. R., 8 
Gaenssle, C. B., 25 



Gaines, W. L., 77 

Gale, H. G , 52 

Gano, Laiu-a C. (Mrs. 
Jerome McNeill), 81 
tGarber, J. P., 79 

Gardner, W. A., 83 

Garner, J. B., 56 

Garrey, W. E., 76 
tGarrison, G. P., 16 

Garrison, W. E., 28 

Garver, P. B., 14 

Gates, E., 29 

Gates, R. R., 80 

Geiger, J. R., 7 

Gerard, R. W., 77 

Gibbens, Gladys E., 50 

Gilchrist, L., 54 

Gillespie, W., 45 

Gillette, J. M., 19 

Gingrich, C. H., 51 

Glattfeld, J. W. E., 60 

Glenn, T. H., 86 

Godbey, A. H., 24 

Goetsch, E., 74 

Goettsch, C, 39 

Goettsch, H. M., 58 

Goldthwaite, Nellie E., 58 

Gomez y Pineda, L., 85 

Gooch, W. T., 63 
tGoodman, H. M., 86 

Goodrich, C. L., 15 

Goodspeed, E. J., 25 

Gordis, W. S., 34 

Gordon, C. H., 67 

Gordon, J. E., 87 

Gordon, Kate, 5 

Gordon, W. C, 19 

Gore, W. C, 5 

Gottschalk, V. H., 55 

Gould, C. N., 39 

Grafton, E. H., 63 

Granbery, J. C, 26 

Grant, E. D., 49 

Graves, T. S., 42 

Gray, C. H., 42 

Gray, C. D., 23 

Gray, C. T., 11 

Gray, M. D., 34 

Gray, W. S., 11 
tGreeley, A. W., 76 

Green, W. R., 74 

Greer, J. R., 76 

Gregory, Emily R., 71 

Greisheimer, Esther M., 78 

Greyvenstein, J. H. J., 27 

Griffin, P. L., 51 

Griffith, D. D., 43 

Griffith, E. C, 17 

Griffith, R. H., 42 

Gronow, H. E., 39 



Groves, J. P., 82 
Grubb, A. C, 65 
Gunnerson, W. C, 35 
Gumey, L., 53 
Guthrie, C. C, 76 
Guyer, P. E., 38 
Guyer, M. P.. 71 

Hagenow, C. P., 55 
Hague, S. M., 81 
Hall, A. J., 29 
Hall, E. A., 44 
Hall, I. C, 87 
Hall, R. E., 61 
Hall, R. A., 58 
Ham, W. R., 53 
Hamilton, C. H., 7 
Hamilton, I. C, 15 
Hamilton, W. A., 51 
Hammer, B. W., 87 
Hammond, E. P., 41 
Hance, J. H., 69 
Hancock, J. L., 32 
Handman, M. S., 21 
Hanke, Martin C, 65 
Hanke, Milton T., 62 
Hardesty, I., 74 
Harding, A. M., 49 
Hardy, C. O., 18 
Harlan, R., 29 
Harper, E. H., 72 
Harrington, E. L.. 54 
Harrington, F. B., 12 
Harris, Mary B., 35 
Harris, N. D., 16 
Harris, W. C, 18 
Hart, J. K., 11 
Hart, W. L., 49 
Harvey, E. M., 82 
Harvey, L. H., 80 
Harvey, R. B., 84 
Hasselbring, H., 80 
Hassler, J. O., 48 
Hatai, S., 74 
Hatch, Laura, 69 
Hatcher, O. L., 42 
Hatfield, Ethel G. (Mrs. 

H. R.), 15 
Hatfield, H. R., 13 
Hatton, A. R., 15 
Haupt, A. W., 84 
Haxo, H. E., 38 
Haydon, A. E., 28 
Hayes, A., 65 
Hayes, E. C, 20 
Hayes, J. W., 9 
Hayes, Mary H. S. (Mrs. 

J. W.), 8 
Hayhurst, E. R., 87 
Hays, H. M.. 32 



92 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



Hazlett, O. C, 48 
Hearon, Cleo, 18 
Hebb, T. C, 53 
Hedenburg, O. P., 61 
Hefleran, Mary, 86 
Heidel, W. A.. 31 
Heilbrunn, L. V., 73 
Heineman, P. G., 86 
Heinzelman, J. H., 39 
Hellems, P. B. R., 33 
Heller, O., 39 
Helmick, H. H., 63 
Hemenway, A. P., 81 
Henderson, A., 48 
Henderson, L. M., 61 
Henke, P. G., 6 
Hennings, A. E., 54 
Herrick, H. M.. 25 
tHerrick, J. A., 27 
Hersman, Anne B., 32 
Hesse, B. C, 56 
Hessler, J. C, 57 
Heuver, G. D., 25 
Hewes, Amy, 20 
Hibbard, Laura A., 44 
Hickman, W. W., 59 
Higley, L. A., 59 
Hildebrandt, T. H., 47 
Hill, H. W., 42 
Hill, J. B., 81 
Hilpert, W. S., 58 
Hines, Marion (Mrs. Leon- 
ard Loeb), 75 
Hirsch, A. H., 29 
Hirsch, E. P., 83 
Hoashi, R., 28 
Hobbs, G. M., 53 
Hoben, Allen, 25 
Hobson, A. A., 25 
Hobson, Elsie G., 11 
Hoflstadt, Rachel E., 82 
Hole, A. D., 68 
Holferty, G. M., 79 
Hollingsworth, J. E., 32 
Holmes, S. J., 71 
Holt, A. E., 28 
Holt, I. L., 24 
Holtom, D. C, 29 
Holtz, A. A., 30 
Hopkins, Annette B., 43 
Hopkins, L. A., 51 
Hopkins, T. C, 67 
Horak, J., 21 
Home, C. E.. 24 
House, J. T., 20 
House, R. E., 37 
House, R. T., 38 
Howard, E. D., 14 
Howe, C. D., 79 
Howerth, I. W., 19 



tHoxie, R. P., 14 
Hubbart, H. C, 18 
Hubble, E. P., 52 
Huber, H. L., 86 
Hughes, Helen S., 44 
Hulbert, J. R., 43 
Hull, G. P., 52 
Hulley, L., 23 
Humphery, E. C, 61 
Hunter, W. S., 9 
Hutchins, W. N., 29 
Hutchinson, A. H., 82 
Hutchinson, J. I., 45 
Hutson, P., 32 
Hyman, Libbie H., 73 
Hyskell, I. D., 35 

Ihrig, R. M., 40 
tingbert, C. E., 74 
Ingold, L., 46 
Innis, H. A., 15 
Inskeep, Annie L. (Mrs. 

L. D.), 15 
Irons, E. E., 87 
Ishida, Y., 65 
Ivy, A. C. 77 

Jack, T. H., 18 
Jackson, G. P., 40 
Jackson, V. T., 65 
Jacobsohn, I. M., 65 
Jacobson, Clara, 77 
Jeffreys, EUzabeth, 57 
Jensen, C, 16 
Jensen, H. E., 21 
Jensen, H. G., 80 
Jernegan, M. W., 17 
Jewett, P. B., 52 
Johnson, E. H., 14 
Johnson, H. P., 71 
Johonnott, E. S., 52 
JoUiffe, R. O., 36 
Jonas, J. B. E., 38 - 
Jones, E. S., 9 
Jones, Plorence N., 37 
Jones, H. A., 84 
Jones, H. E., 23 
Jones, Jessie L., 38 
Jones, L. W., 57 
Jones, L., 72 
Jones, R. M., 32 
Jones, W. D., 70 
Joranson, E., 19 
Jordan, E., 6 
Jordan, P. C, 52 
Jordan, H. E., 46 
Jurist, A. E., 65 
Just, E. E., 74 
Kadesch, W. H., 54 
Kantor, J. R., 7 



Kato, K., 29 

Kawabe, K., 21 

Kawaguchi, U., 28 

Kay, G. P., 68 

Keirstead, W. C, 28 

Keith, A. L., 32 

Kellerman, Ivy (Mrs. E. C. 
Reed), 36 

Kelly, P. T., 24 

Kelly, M. J., 55 

Kendall, Claribel, 50 

Kennedy, Mary J., 34 

Kenoyer, Leslie A., 83 
tKern, P. O., 39 

Key, D. M., 33 

Kharasch, M. S., 64 

Kildahl, Nielsine J., 81 

King, C. E., 77 

King, H. H., 63 

King, I., 6 

Kingsbiu-y, P. A., 10 

Kingston, H. R.. 48 

Kinney, J. M., 49 

Kirk, E. G., 74 

Kissling, R. C, 32 

Kitch, Ethel M., 7 
tKite, G. L., 86 

Kitson, H. D., 9 

Kjerstad, C. L., 9 

Knight, L. I., 82 

Knott, T. A., 43 

Knowlton, A. A., 53 

Knox, J. K., 69 

Koch, P. C. 78 

Koch, Helen L., 10 

Koessler, K. K., 78 

Kohman, Emma A. (Mrs. 
A. C. Ivy), 77 

KoUer, A. H., 40 

Koos, L. v., 11 

Koppius, O., 56 

Kracher, P. W., 40 

Krappe, A. H., 38 

Krathwohl, W. C, 48 

Kraus, E. J., 83 

Kraybill, H. R., 83 

Krehbiel, E. B., 17 

Kroesch, S., 39 

Kueflner, Louise M., 40 

Kuehne, J. M., 53 

Kummel, H. B., 67 

Kunerth, W., 56 

Kurath, H., 36 

Kyrk, Hazel, 15 

Lake, G. C, 86 
Lamson, K. W., 49 
Land, W. J. G., 79 
Landacre, P. L., 73 
Landauer, R. S., 65 



INDEX OF NAMES 



93 



Lane, E. P., 50 
Langdon, LaDema M., 84 
Larew, Gillie A., 49 
Larsen, L. M., 64 
Lasley, J. W., Jr., 50 
Lassalle, L. J., 55 
Law, Helen H., 35 
Lawrie, J. W., 58 
Lawson, A., 79 
Leacock, S. B., 13 
Lee, J. Y., 54 
Lee, J. F., 18 
Lee, O. J., 52 
Leech, P. N., 60 
Lees, J. H., 69 
Lehmer, D. N., 45 
Leigh, T. R.. 61 
Leighton, M. M., 69 
Leman, E. D., 61 
Lemon, H. B., 54 
Lennes, N. J., 46 
Le Stourgeon, Flora E., 49 
Levy, F. A., 25 
Lewis, E. H.. 41 
Lewis, F. G., 26 
Lewis, J. H., 86 
Lewis, W. L., 59 
LUUe, F. R., 71 
Lillie, R. S., 72 
Lindquist, T., 47 
Linfleld, H. S., 25 
Link, G. K. K.. 83 
tLinscott, H. F., 35 
Lippincott, I., 14 
Lister, J. T., 38 
Livingston, B. E., 79 
Lloyd, S. J., 59 
Locy, W. A., 71 
Loeb, L. B., 55 
Lofberg, J. O., 32 
Logan, W. N., 67 
Logsdon, Mayme I., 51 
Long, E. R., 86 
Longest, C, 43 
Longley, W. R., 46 
Lough, Susan M., 18 
Lovitt, W. v., 48 
Luckenbill, D. D., 24 
Luckhardt, A. B., 76 
Ludgate, Katherine E., 10 
Luebke, W. F., 40 
Luh. C. W., 10 
Lunn, A. C, 51 
Lutz, F. E., 72 
Lyman, R. L., 12 
Lynde, C. J., 53 
Lyon, E. P., 75 
Lyon, Florence M. (Mrs. 

S. V. Norton), 79 
Lyon, L. S., 15 



Macarthur, J. R., 42 
Macarthur, J. W., 74 
tMcAtee, J. E., 49 
McCaleb, W. P., 16 
McCallum, W. B., 80 
McCampbell, E. F., 85 
McCaskill, V. E., 72 
MacClintock, L., 38 
MacCUntock, P., 70 
MacCUntock, S., 15 
McClusky, Katharine L. 

65 
McCormick, Florence A., 

82 
McCown, C. C, 27 
McCoy, H. N., 57 
Mccracken, W., 58 
McDonald, J. H., 45 
MacDougall, W. C, 28 
MacDuflfee, C. C, 51 
McFayden, D., 18 
MacGibbon, D. A., 14 
McGrane, R. C, 18 
McGuigan, H. A., 78 
Macintosh, D. C, 28 
Mcintosh. J. S., 34 
McKay, B. R., 70 
McKee, R. H., 57 
McKenzie, R. D., 21 
McKibben, G. F., 37 
McKibben, P. S., 75 
McKinney. T. E.. 46 
McKnight, R. J. G., 24 
MacLean, Annie M., 19 
McLean, F. C, 77 
MacLean, R. A., 32 
McLean, S. J., 13 
MacLennan, S. F., 5 
McLeod, A. F.. 58 
McManis, J. T., 10 
MacMillan, D. P., 5 
MacMillan, W. D., 57 
McNeal, E. H., 17 
MacNeill, H. L., 26 
McNeill, J. T.. 29 
MacNeish, H. F., 47 
McPheeters, C. A., 7 
Macpherson, H., 20 
McPherson, W., 57 
Magee, J. D., 14 
Malone, K., 44 
Manning, W. R., 17 
Markle, M. S., 82 
Marsh, C. D., 72 
Marsh, G. L., 42 
Martell, G. A., 27 
Martin, A. W., 60 
Martin, Bertha E., 73 
Martin, J. N., 82 
Mather, K. F., 69 



Matson, G. C. 70 
Matthews, I. G., 24 
tMaulsby, D. L., 42 
Maurer, H. H., 18 
Maxson, C. H., 18 
Maxwell, B., 44 
Maxwell, S. S., 75 
Maynard, J. A., 25 
Mead, A. D., 71 
Mebane, W. N., 23 
Meek, T. J., 25 
Meek, W. J., 76 
Mehl, M. G., 68 
Melton, G. L., 17 
Menten, Maud L., 78 
Menzies, A. W. C, 59 
Merrell, W. D., 79 
MerrUl, A. S., 49 
Merritt, A. N.. 14 
Metzinger, L., 40 
Meyer, J. J., 35 
MUes, E. J., 47 
Miller, C. D., 55 
Miller, E. A., 11 
Miller, EUzabeth W.. 22 
Miller, G. E., 64 
Miller, I. E., 6 
Miller, J. A., 45 
Miller, L. F., 56 
Miller, M. L.. 19 
Millerd, Clara E.. 31 
Milligan, C. H., 64 
Millis, H. A.. 13 
Minton, J. P., 56 
Misener, G., 31 
Miser, W. L., 48 
Mitchell, S. C, 15 
Mitchell, W. C, 13 
Mittleman, E. B., 15 
Mode, P. G., 29 
Mode, R. H., 24 
Moenkhaus, W. J., 72 
Mohr, C. A., 6 
Moncreifl. W. P., 5 
Monroe, C. J., 65 
Monroe, Paul, 19 
Monroe, W. S., 11 
Moodie, R. L., 68 
Moody, H. W., 54 
Moon, E. Laetitia (Mrs. 

H. S. Conard), 22 
Moore, A. B., 19 
Moore, A. W., 5 
Moore, Anne, 76 
Moore, C. R., 74 
Moore, D. R., 17 
Moore, E. C, 5 
Moore, E. J., 54 
Moore, E. S., 68 
Moore, J. C, 59 



94 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



Moore, R. C, 69 
Moore, R. L., 46 
Moore, W. C 59 
Morgan, Agnes P., 60 
Morgan, O. T., 24 
tMorrison, P. M., 48 
tMorton, E. P., 42 
Moulton, E. J., 48 
Moulton, P. R., 51 
Moulton, H. G., 14 
Muenzinger, K. P., 36 
Mtdflnger, G. A., 39 
MulUken, R. S., 65 
Mullinix, R. D., 63 
Mulsow, P. W., 87 
Mumford, E., 20 
Munson, J. P., 71 
Murley, J. C, 35 
Myers, W. R.. 40 

Nabours, R. K., 73 
Neflf, T. L., 37 
Neilson, C. H., 76 
Nelson, A. L., 48 
Nelson, C. A., 50 
Nelson, H. H., 25 
Nelson, N. L. T., 79 
Nelson, R. E., 63 
New, C. W., 29 
Newman, H. H., 72 
Nichols, H. W., 55 
Nicholson, P. M., 75 
Nicholson, G. A., 43 
Nicol, C. C. W.. 7 
Noe, A. C, 39 
Norlin, G., 31 
tNorman, W. W., 75 
North, C. C, 20 
Northup, G. T., 37 
Norton, P. O., 26 
Norton, J. P., 60 
Nourse, E. G., 14 
Nykl, A. R., 38 

O'Connor, Margaret B. 
Olson, O. L., 43 
Opitz, R. B., 76 
Ostaorn, L. D., 27 
Osgood W. H., 74 
Ott, W. P., 50 
Overton, J. B., 79 
Owen, R. B., 9 
Owen, W. B., 31 
Owens, P. W., 46 

Pace, Lulu, 80 
Pack, D. A., 85 
Packard, W. H.. 76 
tPadan, R. S., 13 



Paine, H. M., 61 
Parker, N. S., 18 
Parkins, A. E., 70 
Parmenter, C. E., 38 
Parsons, E. W., 26 
Parsons, Harriet M., 52 
Paschal, G. W., 31 
Patterson, J. T., 73 
Patterson, T. L., 77 
Patton, E. B., 14 
Paullin, C. O., 17 
Peabody, Susan W., 15 
Peaks, Mary B., 34 
Pearce, W. T., 61 
Pease, T. C, 18 
Pechstein, L. A., 9 
Peck, P. P., 16 
Peckham, G. A., 24 
Pelc, J. J., 65 
Pell, Anna J., 47 
Pendleton, C. S., 12 
Perkins, R. R., 30 
Perrin, P. A. C, 9 
Perrin, J. W., 16 
Perry, A. M., 27 
Peterson, H. A., 8 
Peterson, J. C, 10 
Peterson, J., 8 
Peterson, P. P., 59 
Retry, L. C, 82 
Pettit, E., 52 
Pettit, Hannah S., 52 
Pfeififer, Norma E., 82 
Pfeiffer, Wanda M. (Mrs. 

A. G. Vestal), 80 
Phillips, T. G., 84 
PhilUpson, P. H., 40 
Pike, P. H., 76 
Pitcher, A. D., 47 
Pittenger, B. P., 11 
Piatt, R. S., 70 
Plum, H. M., 61 
Poor, V. C, 49 
Pope, Emma P., 44 
33 Popofif, S. J., 63 
Porter, K. H., 15 
Potter, P. D., 60 
tPoyen-BeUisle, R. de, 37 
Prather, J. M., 70 
Pratt, Alice E., 41 
Preston, Ethel, 38 
Preston, K., 35 
Proctor, C. A., 53 
Pruessner, A. H., 25 
Putnam, T. M., 45 

Quaife, M. M., 17 
Queen, S. A., 21 
Quirke, T. T., 69 



Rahn, C. L., 9 

Raiford, L. C, 59 

Rainwater, C. E., 21 

Ramsay, P. P., 24 

Randall, J. G., 17 

Ransom, CaroUne L. (Mrs. 
G. WilUams), 22 

Ransom, J. H., 57 

Ranson, S. W., 74 

Ranum, A., 46 

Rapp, I. M., 54 

Ratclifle, S. C, 21 

Raymond, J. H., 19 

Raymund, B., 77 
tRead, E. A., 27 

Reagan, J. N., 27 

Reaves, S. W., 49 

Reed, P. H., 62 

Reed, H. B., 6 

Reeder, W. G., 13 

Reep, S. N., 20 

Rees, K., 31 

Rees, M. H., 77 

Reich mann. P., 52 

Reinoehl, C. M., 12 

Reuter, E. B., 21 

Reynolds, G. P., 42 

Reynolds, Myra, 41 

Rhoades, Mabel C, 20 

Richardson, Plorence E. 
(Mrs. Edw. S. Robin- 
son), 8 

Richardson, W. L., 12 

Rickert, Martha E., 41 

Riddell, Agnes R., 38 

Riddle, O., 72 

Rigg, G. B., 82 

Riggs, L. K., 78 

RUey, E. P., 6 
fRiley, E. A., 17 

Riley, T. J., 20 

Rising, Mary M., 64 

Ritchey, C. J., 27 

Ritter, Sarah M., 9 

Robbins, P. E., 32 

Robbins, W. W., 83 

Roberts, Edith A., 83 

Roberts, E. N., 63 

Roberts, L. E., 64 

Roberts, W. A., 62 

Robertson, G. R., 66 

Robertson, H. G., 33 

Robins, H. B., 28 

Robinson, B. W., 26 

Robinson, D. M., 31 

Robinson, E. S., 10 

Robinson, W. H., Jr., 27 

Robison, H. B., 26 

Roe, Mabel L., 83 



INDEX OF NAMES 



95 



Roelini, A. I., 40 
Rogers, A. K., 5 
Rogers, P. T., 77 
Roman, I., 50 
Root, R. E., 47 
Rose, D. H.. 83 
Rose, R. C, 84 
Rosenow, C, 10 
Ross, L. S., 75 
Ross, W. H., 59 
Rossbacher, H. J., 64 
Royster, J. P., 42 
Rudd, H. P., 30 
Ruebhausen, Ella E., 42 
Ruediger, G. P., 85 
tRullkoetter, W., 16 
Ruml, B., 10 
RusseU, E., 27 
Ruud, M. B., 43 

Sackett, W. G., 87 
Sage, E. T., 34 
Sampathkumaran, M., 84 
Sampson, H. C, 84 
Sander, P. V., 66 

tSanders, P. W., 19 
Sanderson, D., 21 

tSanderson, Mildred L., 48 
Sauer, C. O., 70 
Sawyer, R. A., 55 
Schertz, P. M., 84 
Schlesinger, H. I., 58 
Schley, Eva O., 82 
SchUcher, J. J., 33 

tSchmidt, E., 24 
Schmitt, Clara, 11 
Schoch, E. P.. 57 
Schoemaker, W. R., 28 
Schoolcraft, H. L., 16 
Schoonover, D. T., 34 
Schott, J. E., 64 
Schub, P. O., 39 
Schultz, A. R., 67 
Schwab, R. K., 28 
Schwabe, H. O., 40 
Schweitzer, A. R., 49 
Scofleld, Cora L., 16 
Scott, A. P., 18 
Scott, J. W., 72 
Searles, Helen M., 35 

tSeidenadel, C. W., 37 
Sellery, G. C, 16 
Senior, J. K., 62 
Sethre, John, 17 
Seward, O. P., 39 
Shackelford, B. E., 55 
Sharman, Abbie L., 42 
Sharman, H. B., 26 
Sharp, L. W., 81 
Sharpe, C. M., 28 



Shattuck, C. H., 80 
Sheaff, H. M., 78 
Sheldon, H. H., 56 
tSheldon, R. E., 75 
Shelf ord, V. E., 72 
Sherbxu-n, G. W'., 43 
Sherflf, E. E., 83 
Sherman, Hope, 85 
Shields, Margaret C, 55 
Shipley. P. W., 33 
Shively, L. S., 49 
Shorey, Marion L., 73 
Shull, C. A., 83 
Shull, G. H., 80 
Sidey, T. K., 33 
Silvey, O. W., 54 
Simon, W. G., 50 
Simons, Etoile B., 80 
Simpson, Georgiana R., 41 
Simpson, T. M., 60 
Sinclair, Mary E., 47 
Sinclair, S. B., 10 
Skelton, O. D., 14 
Skinner, E. B., 45 
Slaten. A. W., 27 
Slater, J. R., 24 
Slaught, H. E., 45 
Sleight, G. N., 32 
SUchter, S. H., 15 
Slosson, E. E., 57 
Smart, W. K., 42 
Smith, A. M.. 27 
Smith, A. W., 46 
Smith, D. M., 49 
Smith, Prances G., 80 
Smith. P.. 33 
Smith, Gertrude E., 33 
Smith, Henry, 17 
Smith, H. J., 62 
Smith, J. H. C, 66 
Smith, J. M. P., 23 
Smith, L. W., 12 
Smith, N. P., 53 
Smith, R. W., 79 
Smith, W. R., 17 
Smith, Warren R., 56 
Smith, W. A., 12 
Smith, W. C, 21 
Smythe, W. R., 56 
Snider, L. C, 69 
Snow. Laetitia M., 80 
Soares, T. G., 23 
Souder, W. H.. 55 
Sparks, E. E., 16 
Spencer, M. L.. 42 
Sperry, Pauline, 49 
Splawn, W. M. W., 15 
Spoehr, H. A., 59 
Sprengling, M., 25 
Stacy, L. J., 55 



Stafford, L. H.. 27 
Stagner. B. A., 61 
Stark, A. R., 26 
Starr, Anna M., 81 
Starnes, D. T., 44 
Staudt, C. K., 26 
Stauflfer, C. R., 68 
Steadman, J. M., 44 
Steelman, A. J., 30 
Steik. K. T., 64 
Steiner, J. P., 20 
Stephens, G. A., 14 
Stephenson, E. A., 69 
Sterns, W. P., 13 
Stetson, H. T.. 52 
Stevens. D. H.. 43 
Stevens. P. L.. 79 
tStevenson, J. H., 23 
St. John, W., 29 
Stober, J. P., 82 
Stokes, EUa H., 6 
Stokey, A. G.. 80 
Stoland, O. O.. 76 
Stone, Isabelle, 52 
Stone, R. W., 21 
Stormzand, M. J., 12 
Stout, J. E., 12 
Strausbaugh, P. D., 85 
Strong, Anna L.. 6 
Strong, Helen M., 70 
Strong, R. K., 62 
Stuart, H. W., 5 
Sturtevant, E. H.. 35 
SulUvan. C. T.. 48 
Sundwall, J.. 74 
Sunne, Dagny G., 6 
Sutherland, A. H., 8 
Sutherland, E. H.. 21 
Sutherland. G. P., 77 
Swaim. V. P., 54 
Swanson, W. W., 14 
Swartz, S. E.. 56 
Swearingen, G. C, 34 
Swift, C. H.. 75 

Tabor, Alice P.. 41 
Taft, Julia J., 6 
Takahashi, K., 73 
Talbert, E. L.. 6 
Talbert. G. A.. 77 
Tanner, Amy E., 5 
Tannreuther. G. W., 73 
Tansey, V. O.. 70 
Tarr. W. A., 69 
Tartar. H. V.. 64 
Tashlro. S., 78 
Tatum, A. L.. 77 
Taylor. Ara villa M., 84 
Taylor. G. C, 42 
Taylor. J. W., 33 



96 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



Taylor, Marion L., 39 
Tear, D. A., H 
Terry, Ethel M., 60 
Terry, Paul W., 12 
Terry, S. B., 17 
Test, L. A., 59 
Theiss, E. L., 33 
Thiessen, R., 80 
Thomas, D. E., 25 
Thomas, W. I., 19 
Thompson, Effle F.. 26 
Thompson, G. A., 43 
Thompson, Helen B. (Mrs. 

P. G. Woolley), 5 
Thompson, J. W., 16 
Thrall, W. P., 44 
Thurstone, L. L., 10 
Tibbetts, W. P., 34 
tTight, W. G., 67 
Tilton, J. L., 68 
Todd, C. C, 61 
Toflteen, O. A., 24 
Tolman, J. A.. 34 
Tomlinson, C. W., 69 
Treadwell, A. L., 71 
Tredway, Helen (Mrs. E. 

A. Graham), 61 
Trever, A. A., 32 
Triggs, O. L., 41 
Trimble, H. C, 63 
Trowbridge, A. C, 68 
Trumbull, H. L., 60 
Tryon, R. M.. 11 
Tschan, P. J., 18 
Tunell, G. G., 13 
Turner, C. H., 72 
Turner, W. D., 62 
Twiss, Edith M., 81 

Uhl, W. L., 13 
Ullman, B. L., 34 
Umpleby, J. B., 68 
Underbill, A. L., 46 
Upson, P. W., 60 
Upson, H. T., 67 

Van Deman, E. B., 33 
Van Dyke, H. B., 78 
Van Dyke, K. S., 56 
Van Hook. L., 31 
tVan Kirk, H., 28 
Van Riper, B. W., 6 
Veblen, O., 45 



Vestal, A. G., 83 
Vincent, G. E., 19 
Vincent, Stella B., 9 
Viol, C. H., 60 
Visher, S. S., 70 
Votaw, C. W., 25 

Wahlin, H. B., 56 

Wald, A. E., 41 

Walker, A. T., 33 

Walker, B. M., 46 
tWalker, D. A., 23 

WaUace, M., 42 

Walster, H. L., 84 

Wang, Chi Che, 22 

Ward, C. P., 37 

Wardle, Addie G., 30 

Ware, N. J., 30 

Warren, L. A. H., 51 

Waterhouse, Melicent E., 7 

Waterman, L., 24 

Waterman, W. G., 84 

Watson, A. C, 28 

Watson, J. B., 8 

Wearing, T., 27 

Weather by, L. S., 60 

Weathersby, W. H.. 12 

Webb, L. W., 9 

Webster, R. W., 76 

Wei, S. K., 7 

Weidensall, Clara J., 8 
tWelch, Jeannette C, 75 

Wells, B. W., 84 

Wells, H. G., 85 

Wells, Mary E., 49 

Weniger, Wanda, 84 

Wertheim, E., 66 

West, P. L., 60 

Weyand, L. D., 30 

White, Laura A., 18 

White, L. D., 16 

White, Marion B., 47 

Whitford, H. N., 79 

Whitney, Lois, 44 

Whitney, W. T., 55 

Whittlesey, D. S., 19 

Wickes, D. R., 26 

Wieman, H. L., 73 

Wilder, P. A.. 67 

Wilder, R. M., 86 

Wildman, M. S., 13 

Wiley, P. B., 48 

WUkins, Eliza G., 33 



Wilkins, T. R., 56 
Willaman, J. J., 85 
Willcox, O. W., 58 
Willett, H. L.. Sr., 23 
Williams, C. B., 26 
Williams, R. J., 78 
WilUams, S. P., 7 
WilUams, W. L. G., 50 
Williamson, E. J., 39 
WilUer, B. H., 74 
Willis, H. P., 13 
WUlson, EUzabeth, 44 
Wilson, A. H., 47 
Wilson, D. T., 51 
Wilson, E. D., 61 
WHson, H. E., 68 
Wilson, N. R., 46 
Wilson, R. A., 70 
Wilson, S. D., 62 
Wiltbank, R. T., 10 
Winchester, G., 53 
Witter, C. E., 6 
Wood, P. A., 38 
Wood, P. E., 50 
Wood, I. P., 25 
Woodbiirne, A. S.. 28 
tWoodhead, H., 20 
Woodhead, Wm. D., 33 
Woods, E. B., 20 
Wooster, Margaret, 10 
Wright, J. R., 53 
Wright, W. K., 6 
Wyckofif, C. T., 16 
WyUe, H. H., 10 
Wylie, R. B., 80 

Yamanouchi, S., 80 

Yarbrough, J. U., 10 

Yeaton, C. H., 49 

Yen, K. L., 7 

Yoakum, C. S., 8 

Yoshioka, G., 36 
tYoung, Ella P., 10 

Young, J. R., 12 

Young, J. S., 15 
tYoung, Mary S., 81 

Yovmgman, Anna P., 14 

Zabel, H. E., 41 
Zaugg, E. H., 27 
Zeleny, C, 72 
fZimmerman, Marie, 40 
Zoethout, W. D., 75 



